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Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-04-11

Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-04-11 page 1

1 TERMS OF jll VEHTIBISG. Bsltv Ob Sqeare. sack iMertloa .......... 0 TS . ..." ttpealel NottSS. BT square, BBOB iBMr ' 'v uob-. -...n la Local BOB BlUlBCBI HotlOM, BBS Ubb, each ioeertloa hhwmih v V Wbbut-Om DqBsra. Bao iBBvrttoa.. . . W " LocbI B&d Ba.ln.l Notice, per Ubb, , ' I , (BOB lBrUoB..-. -. 0 10 bTVii Sonera Bonn tbrae.goat.eit Bf BB (BOB f apnea la the oolnmiu of the Joubbau Marriage Botloee HOcte, wlna bbbbt Ifs tinea. Book Bad Job Printing anally and promptly ete-MM.Business Directory. B KAKEK, NUKTAN K. Attorney Lew, An) bo' mvinog, vi o.ninmn. jwn o 0 X C CI., Dealer tn Fine Tobnooo end Ogam, no. 77 soma aignii. jmuia w HOWNr.. K. M , PhjikUB and Burgeon, Hoi I OjKrft 11 DIM) UJOCIU J""' T lOITN rAIN, W. W., PbyilclaBBnd Borgeoa. ' Oaelo Neughtoa Bullllng. jangily G ANTT OA.88T. Pnotogr.pbere, Mo. ISA Bourn uigiiat. jen i lAKIrNKK. A. Jr.. M&tery Pablio, Johnaoa r Block. 117 Bon.h U'li ., jB17 If Hcuhkv, vANnRirr tvtheh, Jtenafootarere of TruDks aud VailM, Mob. 164 and lis : onto. Blgh street. . jealg em bTKTIm J. K., N bb! rerlodtoBlPealer, Prat- EL office Boililtus. i.uissm H KYI, WM. I H out ir Pablio and Ju-tloeof H1 UTI MlnNUKI. I. A.. Ol.lm Agent, 117 Bostb Ulgb .l..op. Jetnationai p -a. , j.qii iy -INDKMANN CO., Oonrectloaera and Bee- J taaraioflia. An boa' Bolldlsg. jsols ly , Peeler la From, (Undies Bad Nat., Mo lis I. Htgbel. lamoai Iff KKH KB, O. W . Notary Pnblle Bad Juit'M of 111 IVBOe, 117 BOBl mB. i JBBI1BQ1 TiAi.l.titilA noWKN. sorvtvora. Oivii Tn JT glnran and ! Blalat. AgoBUi, Mo. Watl TVOUT. Ulill. W.. iilW. PujMciiio aud Barge IB Xv 7111' ohI Rxchaugo B'k Balldlng. ran 1 1 8 H l.I.I. KM K AltU K. H . A CO., Claim Agt , 0 tvatltio ! Roh-rgpB'jt BulMlog. Janl7 6iB s ttfTlf. fit. M.. Phji'cWn ndnrgo OtBot on mat. Km tor rearm. Miidm .jr rrAl.l.M AtK, T. W.. Netftry Fob lie Oltlm J. A'l, AmboV BOUUiDg, t'7 p. ,nigo JbMui iy W ARNKKitEI.UOTr, Photogrnibfln, No. 1U7 BOO tB UlgU It. i jnio a Senator Wade Las hU dry Out Senalor Wadi baring, In big uiual calm and dispaaeionata manner, addressed gome tenguage of a mill and expogtula'ory nature toward (he President of (he United Blatea, calling lim auoh soothing games ai "emperor, despot and dictator," Air. Li, of Kansas, remonstrated with him. Mr, LtHi first propoged his own little prescrip tion by whiob the revolted States were to be brought back to "propor prao'loal relationship," &o. It is In the shape of a joint resolution, and (as we learn from ibe official report in the Qlobe), wag olaimed bj Mr. La hk as being founded npon the polioy of the President, as indioaied in his Shabkit lelter. 1 It proposes that Senators and Representatives from either of the Biales lately in insurreotion shall be admitted into Con gress whenever it shall satisfaoiorlly appear that such Btate has, in accordance with the advioe of tho President of the United Btatts, passed lawe annulling ils ordinanoe of secession, ratifying the amendment of the Constitution ot the United States abolishing slavery, repudiating all rebel debts, recognizing ihe debts of the United Stales, and extending the elective franchise to all male persons of oolor residing in the Siate over twenty-one years of age who oan read the Constitution of the United States in the English language and write their names, and also to all mal; persous of odor of like ago and residence who own real estate valued at not loss than $260, and pay taxes thereon The resolution is aocompanied by a proviso declaring that such Senators and Representatives shall possess all the quili-ficationg required by the Constitution and laws of tho United Stitos. Mr. DROWN. 1 should like to inquire of the Senator from Kansas whether he has any assurance that the President of the United Slates is of the same opinion now as he was when be uttered those sentiments Mr. LANK, of Kansas. I have no assurance from the President of the Uniloi States on this or any other subject. He then proooadoi, in that persuasive style of oratory for which he is so famous, oalling Mr. Wads to aooount for his language of theday before. This seems to have soothed Mr. Wade Into additional amiability, and he addressed the following affectionate remarks to Mr. Lank, the President, and all conoerned: Mr. WADE. I am very eorry tjsee that my friend from Kausas is so muoh exeroised this morning. 1 do not know why hie nerves should be so ebooked and shaken by anyihing Ihit I hnvo said or done. I certainly have said nothing in opposition to tho projeot of reconstructing the States, that he has now laid before us, I believe, for Ihe first time. When it was read, I thought it read very well, and I am not at all sure that I should not be willing lo aocept it. I want time lo consider il. I do not know really what is in it. 1 will not make any pledges that I will accept it, but he attacks me very violently; as Lord Hale says, "be lenpe before he comes to Ihe sills." 1 have said nothing, certainly, in opposiiion to his proposition really 1 do not know what it is entirely, but I thought it sounded very well on juMt hearing it loosely. And now, sir, it is said I made an attack on the Prrsiduut of the United Statos. As a Senator upon tbia floor, I oare no more about tho opinions of tlio President of the United State, than 1 do about those of any reepsoinble Seuatsr upon this floor, or any Senator on this floor. Who is your President, that every man must bow to bis opin ion? Why, sir, we all know him; he is no stranger to this body. We have measured himg we know his hoight, bis depth, his length, his breadth, his oapaoily, and all about him. Do you set him up as a paragon and deolare here on the floor of this tteaate that you are going to make ns all bow down beforo biro ( Is that the idea? You to Mr. Lane, of Kansas, are going to be his apologist and defender in whatever he may propose to do I Ie that the understanding of the Senator from Kansas? I do not beliove that his oonBtiluonts will be quile satisfied with so broad a declaration, that be is to wear any man's collar, and follow him wherever he may go. Did 1 nee barab language toward the President yesterday? All that I said I stand by to-dav and forever. What ws the question upon which I made those observaiions, and what. has been the opinion oi me rresiaeni ierelofore; what has been his notion ainoe? Here are three million people, our friends, friends to the Government, who generously jams forward in its difficulty and helped ns throughout the war, laortfioed their blood and their Uvea to mariniain the issue on our side, and who were faithful beyond all men that were ever faithful before, lo us during the whole of the difficulty, everywhere gisting our brave soldiers in the field, laying down their lives to maintain our principles, and ministering in every way to the mis fortunes of cur brave men whenever tbey fell into the hands of those worse than sav ages with whom we were warring; and now these men are laboring, are under one of the most frightful despotisms that ever settled down upon the heads of mankind. Three million people are exposed to ihe out rages, the insolenoe, tne murder of tnoee worse than sivsgee, their former masterr; murdered as we hear every dy, oppressed everywhere, their rights taken away, their manhood trampled unier foo'; and Congress under the Constitution or tne uniua oiates endeavors to extend to them some little pio-teotion, and how are we met here? Every attempt of your Moses bas been to trample them down worst, and to throw every obstruction in Ihe way of any relief that oonld be proposed by Congress. e Now, sir, how stands This mallet? The President of the United States did at an early period profess to be the protector, Ihi friend, the Moses of they men, to lead them from bondage lo liberty. How has he redeemed that pledge? He has from all ap- pearanoee beoomo their tnvetornte ana relentless foe, making violent war upon any member of Congress who dares raise his voice or give hie vote in favor of any measure having for its objeot Ibe amelioration of the condition of these poor people. Talk to me about the President being their friendl When did it ever happen before that a great measure of relief tosuffsring humanity on as broad a soale as this was met by the atern ve'o of the Preeident of the Halted Statea, and without being able when YOLUMK,XXVlH7"A he undertake to-make hi gbslruwtioar- te our maaaurea la defli.nata a ainsle elauae of the Constitution .that he pretends baa bsi n violated, my Lord Coke used to say that fraud lurketh in generalities. - Look through that message, and in not a single p aoe oan he pot hie Soger npon anything that looks like a violation ot ue Loueiita tion of the United Slates. There ie nothing in Ihe bill that looks as if it had fox ita ob-tot anyihing exoept the means of afford ing sorue little relief lo these poor people, thiio friend ef oura, wheav we ar ander the highest 'obligations that ean devolve upon mortal man to see defended agrtinst their morial enemies. How Baa tne rreei- dent redeemed hia nledcee? ' i r Mr. 4,ANK, of nansss. Tue Benator yes terday used this language: "Tne ieeue the Preeident has made wMi Congress, the quarrel he hag picked with Coogrees from the very oommenoemeu Ik nothing more or lees than- on the question of recognising and permitting rebels to oooupy their old plaoes on tnis noor, for ins utter destruolion of the. Government in, my judgment and beltgf."f) M t ... J - I ask th Senator from Ohio to point to a single expression, either oral or written, in whiob the Preeident of the United Slates has advised, advocated, or nrged the admission fit other than truly loyal men upon Ihe floor lor cither branoh of Congress. I Mr. WADB. I wee answering the ques tion in the first plaoe with regard to hia treatment of our friend in the Booth, lhter million people, rear he made a violent ae- seult upon the Conetilution and an aesault upon the power of Congress In thess repeat ed vetoes that art totally destitute of any reason that he can assign foresaw, lie did say earlyj I1 edhril, inVthV UnKsSeV t be- leve that the Senator has set fortn in the proposition he has just submitted, that he would be favorable to some terms wttn tness People, that tbey should have votes if they were aute to react ana write, li incy came up to oerlain qualincatloos. we alt be lieved that he waa willing todoluslioe by these people; but the moment that we un dertake to do anything toseoure their right, we are met by his siern hostility, denying them everything, denying their oititenship, denying their right to have oitizenehip ex tended lo tbem, vetoing our bills beoause they endeavor 10 solve ' the doubt' whelh r they are eitiiens or not, determined that now, henoeforth, and forever, there ehall be an inferior olaai of people, trampled under foot, without the right of oitiaenahtp, and' without Ihe power of Congress to make Ihem oititens. That is the way that this Egyptian relief I extended tti these "men that he pretended he was friendly to. .Yes terday what wag the iaeue? I wag charged with great oruelty on this floor, because I was unwilling to wait lor. ieoruiis to ne brought in her for the purpose of overthrowing the ground we had taken upon this important question whether these poor people ehall have relief or not. Now, I wish to say that t am wlHing to extend courtesy to Our old associates on this floor under other olroumatanoes; bat when you entend this courtesy to them the result is death and destruotion to thros million people trampled under the feet of their former masters. - My courtesy is extended to those poor men, and I would not wait a moment that their enemies may be brought in here in order to prevent our doing anyihing for their relief, joining with the President who ig determined, if we may judge by hia acts, that no measure having for ita objeot any relief shall bs extended to them.- i . Liok at your frivolous second veto mes sage, and tell me it is good faith, will you 1 Did you hear the foots stated here -lite other day, that bills were drawn with a view to esoape the anathemas of your President, and exhibited to him, and he asked ii he had any objection to them, to look thorn over well, " because if we oan, consistent with ihe objeot aimed at, make them cleir of any objection you may have, we will do it." The aeeret motive in his own heart was never divu'eed lo mortal man until the treasures were passed through Congress, and then eternly met by bis veto. Is that good faith? And you talk about-his respectability toward Congress I What did be say to that secession rabble that met aim on tne nua or KAhrnarjr f m om- i inenoed any assault on him? Had any man uttered a word disrrspeotful of Ibe President, when he belched forth those anathemas against th majorities of Congress b Mr. LANE, of Kansas. Had not the Sen alor from Massachusoitg denounotd him as having sent into tbie Senate a "white-wash ing message I ana not ine teaacr oi ine House of Representatives declared that it be had lived in early times, in England, he would have been hanged as a U iitor, before that speech was made Mr. WADE. Does the Senator look upon that ns a justification for an attack upon the power of ihe people as expressed through a nmjority of their Congress, amounting to two thirds of it? Suppose I, in inlomperate language, as you say, had assailed the President unwarrantably, would that authorize him lo viait upon your bead and the heads of other Senators Ibe stigma of being dts unionists, leagued with the enemy to break up this Union? Is that friendly oounsel from your x.xeouuver ion say you uro going: to defend all hie meaaurcs; you are his apologist for anything he has done, or anything be may do. I did say, air, that he seemed to have meditated a controversy with Con gross from the beginning, and be bas. He has treated our majorities as hos tils to the people; two thirds of both branches of Congress has been treated by bim at mere factionist., disunionisls; enemies lo ibe oountry bent npon Its destruction, leaguing with the enemy to destroy tne Government. This is Ihe way the President has treated Congress, and every bill tbey have passed which promieeu any relief to the men whom we are bound to pro-teol, has boen trampled under tho executive heel; and even when members of this body did what I aay they ought not to have done for I do not approve of my brolher Trumbull' going up lo the President, when he has a measure pending here as a Sena'or, to ask Ihe Preeident, in tbe first plaoe, whether he will approve ot It or not; even when he woe asked If he objected to-lbis measure, and made no objeotion, he still undertakea to veto it. Your President, in order to trample down Congress, if he eotild, and to destroy and override the rights of tbe States, ha readied hie executive arm into States in older to oarry e'oo-tions in bis favor, and rent his myrmidons tbore to proolalm his will and his wlBhee and to argue the queetlon pending before the males or mis union, ne proieBeiusj to u. a Btalea rlghtg manl 'there is a point l nnl van. air. to defend him UDin. . If von aav our side went to him lo get his opinion to carry Into Connection!, I say that tney ougnt not to nave uone it u wvj attempted it. It was stooping from that dlo-niiT whlnb should ever obaraoterise Cougress ana tne priae aua iuiblukouo. vi a Btate, lo msxe any aiiempt 10 ci i j State by exeontive innuencs or uioiuuou. Nv a.r. if newsnaner reports may be re lied upon I do not know t'tat they oan be he haa don worse than that; be hag been tampering with members of legislative hod aa in order to extend hi influenoe there and bring over men to sugtain his side of this queetlon there. Thl. la .11 fir nlav. ie It? When I aay that he i endeavoring to override and glander and libel members of Congreea and avan two thirds of both Houses, and be- cause I denounoe that on tbe floor of this Senate, am I to be arraigned by an apolo gist of th President, by one who proclaims himself to be his defender, and who is com missioned, for ought I know, to defend him hare and elsewhere? I spoke yesterday of the President's usurpation, and I ask again what business, what constitutional right has th President of tbe United State to teach his exeoniive arm into any Slate, seceded or not teoeded, tost tun aivll covernifflnt there? If any lawyer of thl body oan find any warrant for eueh an aot in the Conetltntion, I will take back all that I have said about it. But, air. vou cannot find it there. The rresi dent la a mere executive offioer, bound to obey our mandates and our behests tn this pirticular, having no right to have any will of hi own on the subject. If during iha vacation of Congress ke thought It wa expedient and urgently nrceaeary that these Siatee should be brought book into th Union, he eboold have convened th National Legislature to take that question into consideration. H had bo power oa t.A'l'Oc.iiJ Dmug: 'li, .tle'O.r i ir'rt - r?r-Tt--rz r-r-fT od1 earth, Bo SoinlIlla,BO color of author- ity for undertaking to reorganise them and . bum Ibega hens for admission., ' Wh it di 1 he do? He let th whole long vaeation run over without making any effort to coavone Congress, or. in any way insinuating that he .wanted In oounsel'of Oengiw o the-subject; bat behind their backs and m their abeence we find htm dic tating to lb States, for he oalla them States, and he say tbey are fh the Union and have nover been out of the Union. If they have ot been out of 'the Union, 'as he. alleges, then be is the molt bold usurper who ever uudertook to aooumulate unwarranted power in hie own bands. What right haa he to go into any State rcfj this Union Bad die-place the Governor that has been elected there 7 What right has hs lo put by and overrido the Legislature of any Blt.le of this Union? He has done it. There is not a State now south of us, except Tennessee, that is not a mere creature of executive power. Tbe people there never moved lo regain their relations with tbe General Government exoept as they sure moved. by Ihe executive arm. ITkey hav sent.ua Be petitions, they have had no meetings to oonsider (he subject among themselves; but your Executive Chief, holding those States under tbe military power of Ihe Govern ment, they being under martial law, and the habeas emnu being overridden, the military breath being there the law ef Ihe land, oommanded tbem lo form oonstitu-Hos; -and tiigy were lot even accoided Ihe poor, miserable privilege of making them acoording to Iheir own will, but nnder tbe bayonete of tbe conqueror tbey were order ed to make their constitutions, and be sent it is .orient i then telling' them what pro- vltlobe they -muat mage in inoee uonetitu- lions. Do you deny that? Hue he not told Ihem over and over again, if you make your constitutions without such ana such provisions you, will sot be admitted in Congress? ig that according to Amcrioan prinoipleg f Bad as these men are, seces sionists as I know them to be nioetly, I say you cannot make an American republioau Stat out of that material, and In that way. until these people oan agree toaaaemoie themselves together and make suoh constitutions as will accord to that of the United States, and ,aek to resume their relations wit. tM General Government under suoh oonetitutions, they can have none. If the President bas found fault with Congress beoause they did not, at his breath, when they first assembled, admit these States into theUn'OB and'a'low their member back lato Congreea, and if we sre to bo oonstant- ly anathemallsed by htm for not doing It, it is because he intende to have them come in here resuming their old plaoes. What haa hs done to discriminate ? 1 ask the Senator to tell me I say these usurpations are unwarrant able. The President has oensnred Con-gioss from Ihe beginning, although at the vory first moment that we had time to deliberate en the subject after Congress convened we raised a great eommiUee for the purpcBe of taking it into eonsideralion, and while we were doing it he was oensuring ns as having oreated an irresponsible oen-tral despotism herb. Did tbe man believe it? Defend him if you oan. Did the Pres ident of Ihe United Stales bellevo the charge when he accueed Congioss with de liberately getting up an lrresponeiDle central despotism totyranlze over this Government? If he did not believe it, whero does it plaoe him? Judge ye, and defend him if you oan. lie said it was an irre sponsible despotism "direotdry" was ibe word an irresponsible cerfBiLiitrcotory, dangorous to the liberties or the people; and what wns il? A mere oominittee of Congress, the oommonost thing in tbo world, nn instrument made use oi by con gress to ascertain tbe very fnets that tbe President ought to havo wanted to know as muoh as we did if be wanted Iheso Biales properly reeouelruoted. What tight had be on the subject? ,' Rarely nothing. Hut had we bad tne Itgnt ne preieoueu to nave, suon as it was'' ' Even now he dare not say in is proclamation of peace that theBe peo ple are ready lo resume their relations with tbe Government. If ihey have not done hat is neoceory, bo piopnesies urn mey -tin do it. Uo kooirs noiuing about it, or f he does know about 11, bo knows that that flood of testimony brought from ibis great oommitteobns enlightened everybody uppn tbe facia, aud that there is no one of these States (bit is ready to resume her re-lations with the Goreramenl, or can do so, because Ihey are yet hostile lo the Government. He eomplaincd of us for not letting n those g-overnments while ho stood over tbem with tbe bayonet aud dared not withdraw his troops; when martial law perva ded every inch of their territory. We wore blamed for not lotting in nere a euouucu and hoslile people that were kept under the ban of oxcontivo tliotatiou. upon the prin- iplcg that he, the Commandor-in-Chief, should dictate. That is what we were oen- sured for. What else was tbore in It I I am reminded by alienator near me that his organs are threatening us day by dy with the bayonet. We are to be driven out of here. I see it everywhere. Mr. Voor- hces, of Indiana and you know what a loyal man he is a man, I believe, who it oame out on a luatoiat inveeugaiion in uinv Btnte was the keeper of the reoords of Ihe Knights of the uoiden ciroie, wno nan formed themselves Into a hostile oommunily, and had joined the rebsls lo overthrow the Northern otaies Mr. HENDRICKS. Will the Senator al low me to interrupt him? i M. WAUK i os, sir. ! Mr. HENDRICKS. I Bay that the obarge which he now makes against Mr. Voorboes ig not sustained by any reoord, and I give it now a square denial. r.Mr. Wape at this point suspenaea nis remarks until certain unfinished business was disposed of, when he oontlnued :' Mr. WADE. I was nearly through tbe remarks I proposed to make on this sudden outbreak. As tbe President, without any oauss on eurlb, has censured Congress and aoouscd thorn of having erected a doepotism here, though it was nothing more than an ordinary oomraittee for the purpose of taking testimony to enlighten us upon the subject of legislation that wa must outer upon or tne most important canraoi.or, ioi ine rofor to his own oonduct to ehow the quo animo more perfeolty. We had, it seems, besought him to lay before Congress that evidenoe which bo himself had, and nobody else had; and how did he meet it? I believe and let gentlemen of Ihe committee cor- reot me if 1 am wrong it waa more than two months, and after three several appli cations to him, before we oould extort from him the very evidenoe witnout wnion con gress could not slit hand or foot on this subject. He had th constitutions lhat he bad diatated; Coogresa had never seen ono of them. lie had other -muniments of their titles to be Stales, if States they are; and while he stood before tue rabble there, Boouiins CongreBS of being despotic and at- lamntine- to ovirthrsw the Government, be was wlthhoiaing tne very eviueuo. wjmm which Congress oould neither stir hand nor fool. Waa that candid? Other eenators have been much more fortunate than I have if ihey have been able as yet to sea one single constitution of these reconstructed Hiaiea that we are lold are all in orderto-day. What ara Ihev? Apologists of the Preaidonl, ooodeaoend lo loll us what are Ihe oonsiuu- i lona of these reconstructed states of yours I saw from th papers that diver orders went down to their conventions requiring them to do this and Ihe other on the peril that ihey would not be admitted here; but where Is tne auinenuo evidence oi now thev same out of il, and what thoy did do, and what they are? The President lays Ihey are reooustrucled Slates, with all th rights, powers, and lmmuaitios of Slates, with n ri.nt 10 aiaim ail tn. riKuuui rela tion of th unaeeeded Btate. How dees hs know it? How do w kuow li? When a Hint, la lo be gdmitled into Ibis Union, everybody knows th first ibing is for lhat Btate, after it nas neon pormmeu w uumv In hero bv Congress, to furnish us with the constitution that the ptopls themselves, un biased bv executive dictation, nave auopteu as lbs will of the people, that wo may see whether it ia republioan, whether It squares with th Constitution of th United Btatts, and whether It i proper for us to admit ibam hare. Congress passe judgment upon it. It i not lb President lhat admit Sta'es; it Is tbe United StaUs. Tbe United Slates, say the Constitution of th United State la thundering tones, .shall Judge at linn j s fl U- 1 'it- .... .t ...... ,. Columbus, 3 ohio. Wednesday morning, tbem-fbrm Of korarnli ot the Preai- dent of th United 8tatc s. It I Congress, the true representative of the sovereignty of this great nation, anl it reel and abides nowhere else.' The doctrine that -ylelde everything- to the Eieoutive and nothing to Congress ie Ihe most slavish, dootrine that waa ever propagated la B uovernment pretending to be free. You cannot tell no to day what tho constitutions of theso reoon glruoted Slates are; but you do knew that ihey are not gotten up by a people free lo act precisely as they wanted to act. iney war nnder martial law, as I (aid beforo, under executive dictatioa, under the bayo net, and under ihe orders of your Lxeeu live Chief, promulgated to his suborlinate officers to osrry into effeet. Do you eay that an American constitution can be built upon euch a foundation as thalr , Mr. President, It was these things that I brandedV A usurpations. . It was for these things that I declared that the President of Ibe United State wga eodeavoring lo over throw the constitutional powers of Cingreai aud, lo eretlt a despotism upon its ruins; for Ihe moment it shall be admitted' in 'the Congress of Ihe Uoiled Slates that these immense- powers belong to in exeouuve arm of Ihe Government; inetead of lo us, tou have a .despotism and nothing but a despotism, we have not even the power of Ihe lrgvslatlve body that meets in r ranee. Theso States have destroyed their connec tion with this Government by a four years' War to overturn il; Ihey have disorganised their uwu tt Constitution, have annul. led them all, trampled tbem under foot, have got up new constitutions hostile lo this Government, under new ohiefe, new relationships, Bod entirely destroyed their gonneotiou with the union, ana then when vou Dut tbem down at the point of Ihe bayo net, where do they gland?. Certainly not on their old constitutions, because If Ihey did bow oould President Johnson attempt to declare who might be voters and who might attempt to exercise the elective iraocoise there? 1 say if thee Statea are all stand. ing oa tbey were, originally, how came il that he even wantel lopresorine wnosaouid be voters and who should not? Answer that fur him, girt Tell me why he denies Ihe power lo iheas S'ates, if they are States Of the Union to prescribe Ihe conditions upon wbioh men shall sxeroise ihe eleotive franchise or by what right did he diotate to them on that eubjeot? were they Btaicsr Did he do ii? ' And if ho did, was it not a usurpation, in his own language' sir, these absurditios cannot bs orowded down Ihe throats of a free Congress. All these inoonsiatencics aro bo manifold, so utterly new to the principles and legislation of Amcrioan government, mat inoy Droatue nothing nut the spirit ot despotism, xne people will not permit it to be done. , ,. You say that the party is crumbling to pieoos. If it is, eo much the worse for this Govornment. If Congress should recede from the position Ihey have takon to claim jurisdiction over this great question of re admitting meae siaiea, irom mat nour taey surrender all the power that tho Constitution plaoes in their hands and that they we.e sworn lo eupport, and they are tbe mere slaves of aa accidental Exeontive; of a man who formerly associated with us on this 11 -oi; who was no mors infallible than the rest of ua poor mortal;) and yet Ihe moment, by death or acoidont, he is plaoed in tbe exeoutive chair, it would seem as if acme Senators believed him to lie endowed with enperhumnn wisdom and onght to bo invested with nil the powers of this Goreramenl, that Congress ought lo get on their kaeee before him, and take his insults and his diolation without resentment. and without oven an attempt to resist. Some Slated may Bend suoh instrumentalities here, but God knowa.somewillnol; and I pity those that do, for they would hold their freedom on a reruucertain tenure. - Hut, Mr. President, 1 hav pursued this oourso of argument long enough. It may be that hereutter during the session 1 shall endeavor, iu a more deliberate and orderly nminer, to set Iheir sins in order before some men in high authority that have ao- cueed ua of treaBon hero. Some gentlemen mav liapniUnt Mlr tbe charge of treason, perhaps tho more so becauso treason is becoming popular in this day; but. sir, I am a little loo obi f ishioned to be obargd by tho executive branch of tbis Government as a traitor on the floor of Congress, and not resent it. 1 do not oare whether he be King or l'residout that insinuates that 1 am a disuniomst or traitor, siana- ng upon tho same Infamous platform with ho traitors of the Souih, 1 will not take it from any mortal man, high or low, without repelling the ohirge. If auy man here is tame enough to do it, he ia too tame lo be toe Soualor of it proud-soii-ited people, oon- scious of their freedom. I olaim to bo their representative, aud they will oonsure me if Ihey do uot like my doctrine. It will not ooino from Kansas. 1 will settle it with my own constituents. I fought your battle for you, sir, turning to Mr. Lane, of Kansas, and saved your State in ptrtfrom a slavery worse than that in tbe Southern States, and 1 will save It again it its representative proves recreint lo it Aud now, Mr. President, I wish to make an appeal to those great, patriotic statesmen on this floor who, by their love of principle, by Iheir unswerving honesty, uneo- duocd by the bianaisnnients or exeouuve power, unawed by threats of violenos, stand here to defend the right of the people upon this floor, and will stand hore forever. 1 ay to you, Senators, we, Ihe majority who aro stigmatised as traitors, are the only barrier to-dny between tbia nation and an archy and despotism. If we give way, the hope of Ibis nation is lost by the reoreanoy yen, sir, 1 will say ine trcacsery or aman who betrayed our oouftdeuce, got iuto pow er, and bits goue into the oamp of the enemy, and joined those who never breathed a breath of principle in ooramoo wun us. ' Now. sir, raddressiug Mr. Lane, of Kan sas. if your nerves were unstrung by what 1 eata oetore, x uops inoy win oe oaimeu Dy what 1 havo said now. riughtor.l I say, Senators, you are th hopo of tho people. On vour oourago aud oonstanoy the p:ople rely. You bear tho destinies of this great and free nation not forever for although we should turn our backs and betray our constituents, thcro is behind us a brave people who will vindicate their rights, wbothor we aro reoreant or not. fTrannlated from ttis German by Cgiarlol flrobs. JOHN NIKAl'MX Al HIS HOPUlli Strauss is a second Orpheus, whoa ten- dor-moaning, spiril-sliriug, love kissing music conn tiers the most inveterato enemy of Ternsiohore : whose magio sounds soothe and move tne stones memseivos. mrauss has written waltzes that are more to me than opBras. In seven of his msasurcathere ig often more melody, than in as many heavy scores of other musioians. What a fullness of av ren beauty, what a rich mind of poetry, what an inexnausitu.. louut ot ever gunning melody I And not the melody alone ibe rhythm also with magioal influences atiie the brain and enters tho heart. His violin is a talisman, by which be draws from the demhs of tbe uuav.n soul bright est ior. and deepest woe, and mingles them with master band. The bow wilh wbioh he draws these many-oolored tones from his instrument ie a magical wand, whlohtouoh- kb the grief-torn soul with the healing bat earn of joy and lends ber wings to mount up into heaven or peaoo. in. re are waits-nnmDositions as rich aa melody, but few in molting rhythm as those of Slrausa by tiinea skipping, numuiing;, '.wauzing, lidlue and dancing, so inviting, so irro sistibls, that no danoer oan withstand their influence. He is lb idol of women. In every house, on every piano in Vienna, lie Strauss' waltzes. - He has written over (wo hundred, all are favorites, all are sung and trilled, and played throughout Europe. We bear them in Ihe street, at the ball, in iha irarden and at the theater. The dano- log Viennese carry him on their shoulders and shout: "Sirauaa forever." This Strauss, Ibis wapt-hero, leved the dauarhter of a ooiint : Sophie was her name Her ey was bluer than Haley's heaven, and goiter than tne sweon "guv ui uio vv.uiu .i. (irnoe end beau'v war In every motion, and musio In every tone. Iu a word, HonbiB wa beautiful, dtiillngly beautiful. He would hav gives world I hav won but tns glance of love, but aha waa oold and alern. Madness, inueeu, ior a poor must 0 no, wild Doming doi nil noun, ra oera w lore tun iitgn-Dora oopnif, wno du i nobis anoetlore, aa he had walttet, ! ."' a : i . , "Impertinent I" (aid Sophie; as dwhen be csme to give her brother a lesson on the violin, ghe goaroely deigned bim a look Shortly afterward Sophie was betrothed to Count Robert, Lord Chamberlain, who had indeed as many proud ancestors as sopnie, bat beyond these and his lilies, had nothing of which he oould boast. Uw day when Strauss ohanced to be alone with Sophie, he sank upon hi knees telore her, and with burning words declar ed hia love, and besought her lo give bim but on word ur lock of love, ere he was quit driven lo despair. Rut neither tears nor prostestations moved - her eh wa oold and unfeeling as marble.- "I am an affianced bride," she said haughtily, " and if I were no', think you, I would beoome the wife of a poor musician I " She turned aoornfully away, and left him alone in big grief and despair. The repenlanoe which soon .wok, in the heart of Sophia, unhappily cam too late. The bridegroom and her father hastened the gurriago; in eight days she would be the wife of Count Robert. The oeremony was to be performed in the great saloon of Ibe oity, and th Count oalled oa Strauss to lead the orohestra on that ooca- sioa, and honor his bride with th composition of a new walls ' Strauss, the most miserable man in Golo uuiverse, promised them both; " He wishes to wound me yet tb more deeply," said the unhappy man to himseir, " nut I forgive mm, and may ehe be happy may alio never re pent ber choice.'' t He addressed himseir earnestly lo bis work. This waits should be the interpreter of his passion and big grief to Sophie, it should obauenge at leaat nerptiy, if notner love, n hen all the great city aiepL mrauss took his violin, opened his window, gazed out into the oold night, and improvised and moaned forth bie sad lale of woe, to the sweet slars above that looked kindly down tbe desolate and beart-strioken. The day of tbe wedding came at last. This neroe agony of love hail given him a want, every measure of wbioh Bpoke of longing sorrow, a wailing: woe. The hall glistened and shone with bright jewels and brighter eyea ; put S opble waa more gloriously beautiful than all. The riohest gems left their charms and their luster; the pur myrtle wreath bloomed in her gelden hatr, and the rare andeosily bridal veil shaded her beautiful features from full gaze of Ihe ador- ng orowd. tstrauss, a haggard, emaoiated man, wilh brilliant, piercing blaok eyes, sharp, strongly-marked features, dressed from head to fcot In black, as though he had assumed tbis mourning livery for thl bride now dead to him, stood sad and silent in the gallery above, directing the movements of the orchestra. Bcphie danoed bow with one, and now another of the wedding guests, and ns ofien as she paused after the giddy whirl of tbe danoe, she turned her eyes toward the pale, grief-stricken Strauss, in Us robes of sorrow and mourning, and met bis piercing look of despairing love. I it is more than pity she lett it was re morse. It was kindling love. A terrible pain awoke in her heart, like the swelling stream, growing ever wider and deeper, threatening te overwhelm and destroy her quite, uiadiy he would hav went, but ahe dared nor. it sounded twelve o'olook, and Strauss gave the signal for the performanceof Iho new waits The gay danoers stood up, sopnie on tne arm of the happy bridegroom. All stand spell bound with the wonderous wilohery of those magio sounds. They forgot lo dance they gszed wonderingly at lite pal man in blaok, whose grief-lorn soul breathed out la woe through tbe sounding strings or nis instrument. His bow moved, with his heart went his spirit. The bridegroom led off they dance and dance. Strauss follows th Hying piir with tearful eyes, torn heart. They danoe, and danoe, and dance, and will never cease. Btranss plays, aud plays and ill never stop this wonderful walls, which so fearfully allects both him and them. They anoe and dance; ne plays ana piays ua- denly the E of his violin snaps, and in that mome.nl, Sophie falls dead on the floor. Vio lin and bow fell from his trembling bands, nd with a cry of horror, he shrieked, " nhia " fall tmlniin nn thm tluOr. Bino. oupuie a ueady the wall, is called by bar name; Strauss loved her till his death. lo loo, is now dead, out nis onjraiiug oopiu. alts lives yet. Tbe oaso of Tennessee, and the reason hy Congress has anted with wisdom and prudenoe iu delaying Iter restoration, were well stated by th Hon. W, B. Btokes, M. C. elcot from that State, in a speeoh at a Republican meeting in Conneatiout last week, from which we extract the following: "Why. then, aro these States not admit ted? Dioause they hare not compiled wilh the President' own requirements, Hut ennessoe has; why ie sue not admitted f will tell you. Congress asked for evi denoe as to these Slates. It asked for the proolamallous, constitutions, documents, laws. The President never sent Ihem to Congress until Maroh. But meanwhile it had been gathering prooi irom omer quarters, and at length it was just ready to admit Tennessee. Theu ooo branch of the Legislature was disorganized, and the rebel element, dot being willing to submit lo the rule of the majority, sought to break up anu destroy the Government. They left the House without a quorum, aua it ie sun wna- out a quorum. And I say that while the Government was in lhat condition, there is not man of you who would think lhat State should be rooognizel. Wo therefore do not oomplain or 1110 delayi ne know that admission now would destroy lbs Union element of those Biales. Congress is doing right in holding then back. When the rebel armies hrst surrendered, mere was everywhere a disposition toward loyalty, but 1 stand hore to-night to say lhat there is now a feeling as dsep and bitter toward the Union men of the South, as there ever was in 1800 or 1881. And the faois have proved that Cougrecs, in its oool and deliberate treatment of the matter, deserves the thanks of all the Union men in giving pportunity for these rebels to show tneir hands. Time will show that Congress was right. But all these things will be settled wisely and safely, and whoa loyai men get oonlrol of these governments, there will then be no dffioulty, and all Iheae questions will bt satisfactorily settled. Rush of Herman from IIr, Ham bars; ernel llrrmon. Tho number of emigrants from Germany arriving at Havre to take ship for Ameri ca bag lately managed in an extraoruinary degree. A Havre journal atatos that there are not lees than a thousand emigrants now lodging in th quarter of Saint Francois alone awaiting vessels to take them out. Two days sinoe eighty parsons left Havre for England in tne nope or getting on ear lier. ror 14 vonap. Jjonaon ucraia The same iournsl remarks mat this in crease of emigration ooinoides with a great extenelon of the commercial relation be- twoen Franoo and the United States. Not less than twenty-five vessels are shortly ex-peoltd at Havre from New Orleans, on from Texas ana nv rrom jioono ait iaa- en with cotlon. A considerable quantity of the same material is also being shipped for Havre at New York, along with other merchandise.. In short, the import trad at Havre has not been so brisk for fly years past. '; Ihe llerlin oorresponaenoo iaiarcn 121.n1 of the London Timoa says: The emigration t North Amerioa Is daily assuming greater nnrnorllons. Uo to the end of May, 10,000 perioos have alroady engaged to leave via Hamburg and Bremen, Th emigrants are nearly all Northerners and Protestants, whereas, ten years ago, tho vast majority consisted of Southerners, many of them Ro man Catholios. A ourlout oolleetlen of autograph letter, addressed to the lale Lady Vleasington bv artists, literary men and others, ha just been sold at auotion in i.onuon. it inoiua- . .. . 11 aw.11... t .1 eu letters trotu ..luvio, uu.11.jr, uauuseoi, Diokena, Maoready, Bulwer, Disraeli and manv other oelebrlties, Thero were also some extraordinary relies in th ahape of looks of hair ef distinguished persona; among others, Luoretla Uorgia, the Duke ol Wellington, mra nsison, uonnteea uutooi- oil and Mra. Hemane. At an auotion sal at a oonvant In Paris, i -'b- .. .... Ight hundred pounds of hair shorn from uuu8 ft...D ":Z th veil lno 1810, brought 0,000. JOURNAL. april h. isgg. TELEGRAPHIC. REPORTED FUR THE JOURNAL. FBOM NEW TOBK. Uewrgja Peaaadjr t'oiulnc ! Anorira. Nkw Yobk. April 10. Mr. Geo. Peebody write by tb last atcamer that he intend to Ink ptssage for New York in ibe steamer Bootla, which leaves Liverpool on th 10th of April. Cl'lef Jwatlee Cbnae on th Civil BlghU Bill and Unlvaraal BuBrngr, A publio meeting waa held laat evening in BL I'aul s ni. is. cnuron in mis oity, un der Ihe auspices of th Ladies Uentennary Association. Chief Justice cnase presiueu, and Bishops Janes and Simpson delivered addresses. The Chief Justice in tbeoours of bis remark alluded 10 the passage of th Civil Rights bill, and olaimed that th next t'-p ahou d be to give th ballot to th emancipated slavca. An argument took place before Judge Clarke,at Ihe Supreme Court chambers, yes terday, between tbe Hudson River Railroad Co. and their former attorney, Thos. st. North. The latter waa removed from office, aud it ia alleged took away the legal paper of ihe corporal Ion, refusing to give them bp uutit oosis should be paid. rnnrral of Oen. Ihornlow. The funeral of the late Gen. Thornton, U, 8. A., will take plaoe in this oily to-day. TheCoafederailon Kxelteaneat las Mew HruiwwleJf. Th Herald' Fredrlokton, N. B., apeoial anys : In Ibe upper House yeilorday morning Ue anti-oonftderalion minority pre suited a protest agalnBt the resolution of rridsy and th address to th yueeu. The iowor House adjourned. At. tnree o'olook lo-day, tho members of tbe Government who have boen in oonsultatlon all day will, it is reported, send in their resignations. The exoiiement la sun very 111, ifnvw nvivnm n .......I r. . . The Herald's Fortress Monro speoial says: Kumor at jrorirees Monroe wnispers that Jeff. Davis ig to be removed lo Riohmond on a writ of hibeai corput. Fears are enter tained mat be oannot lire through the coming eummor, ir not released, as nis health is growing worse. Monetary Announcement. Tb Herald's Money Article oontains the following: We understand that the inter est on the -temporary loan now on deposit will be reduoed fire per oent. otter the first proximo, and in me oase or Clearing iiouae certificates, to four per oent. This, at leaat, measure imperatively catted ror. in view of the large amonnt on deposits, and us UBelessness to the Treasury. Ihe Fenian Bena In Beaelon. Th Fenian Senat met in tbie oity yes terday and is in secret session. Naval Matron. The Powhatan, Monadnook, Tusoarora, and Vanderbilt remained at Valparaiso at tbe latest dates. The Mohongo and Niatlo were still at Callao on the 22d ult. The St. Mary's was still at Panama, and there were rumors lhat she was soon to bt laid np on ordinary. Th Wateree, boaring the flag of Rear-Admiral Pearson, sailed from Panama on the 28th ult. for Callao, where the Admiral ia to meet hi now flagship, th Powhatan. .reparation to Roeelvo Btfhen. There waa much exoiiement at Uaicn Square Headquarters yesterday. The Fenian dignitaries were busily engaged in making preparations to receive the great Head-Center Stephens, who is to arrive on the Havre steamship due nt Ibis port tc-day. James Stephens' vi-.it to this oountry will be of ehort duration, depending entirely on bsolute and pro-determined arrangement. The real cause of his viait will be with held till the eve of hia departure. Tho Mporlinn- ateaaon Bog-an. The nrat trot of the segBon takes plaoe at the Fashion Cnnrap 11.1- - -.-slako of $1,6(X1, mile heats, best three in 6 to in harness, between Lady Jonea and Rookland Bey. The t'onviilrnforantttie Dry Tortus;. 'Anelr sjoniiition ana MnpaiiB. The government transport, Eliza Han- ocok, from Galveston on the 22d us) , touching the Florida coast, brings to Fortress Monroe several discharged prisoners, and news of Dr. Mudd, Arnold, Spangler and Col. Marmaduke. Dr. Mudd is kept under close guard, and oompelled to oleon out th bastions and oasemates oi tue lort, anu uo Ihe menial work. His oonBtant prayer is for dealh. Arnold is employed as clerk for Captain Van Reed, Post Adjutant. A guard attends bim to bis meala, wbioh are the game as are provided for the other prison ers, and at night be is kept in oiose ousted y. Spangler is at work in the Quartermaster's oarpontcr shop. He ie robust and jolly, aud his oondtlion he attributes solely lo his being innooout 01 any puruoipaviou in the dreadful orime charged against him. Col. Marmaduke. found guilty of the noted conspiracy lo froe Ibe prisoners of Camp Douglas and burn cnioago, ubb snargs ui Ibo post garden. Ki-jolclac ovr tbo Pnmaareor the Civil Rlg-ntH Bill. A salute of 100 gun will b tired thl morning by the Union League Club of Union Square in honor of the passage of the Civil Rights bill by Congress. 1HOS NEW OBLr ANS. Market. Nxw Oblbans, April 9. notion (a ouiel: gales 2.700 bales: re ceipts to-day 2,245 bales; low middling 84) a8(io. Sugar fully fair at 14 Jo. Molasses nominal. Flour 17 76. Corn, mixed ana yenow, 80a82jo, Oats 60o. Tobaooo, fair, 14al6o. i'ork zo. iiaooa snouiuers ioo. Oold 26. Sterling txohang 82. New York oheokg dieoount. Fraigbt to New York 102. Tha General Blew. Th steamers Gen. Cromwell and Merrl- mao from New York have arrived. Numerous attaeka ara made in this oity by alung shots and oitisens robbed. Many lunaties are abroad. These robbers and insane men were freed from prisons and asylums during the war, and oome from all parts of the oountry. Tne water orevasso is Deiug Bugoeamu', olosed. Th upper crevasse is too wide to close, but the Ihe ends of the lower are secured.The Methodist Conforenoe is discussing Ihe Eplsoopal vetoes and noti6oation by conference. Union prayer were made, and Sunday generally observed. SiiagvtPoRT, April 4. Very little oolton rooeived from the inte rior. The demand ia good and pnoe an-vanoed.LITER FROM EUROPE. ' Humor of War" In Europ. Coboobd, Mb., April 10. Tha steamer Bela-ian. Cant. Brown, from l.lwamnnl on the afternoon of the 29th ult., via Londonderry on th 80lh, arrived here at 6:80 A. M. lo-day. Th. l.nnrlnn TIlOSB or lUB UUIU BBVB lUOre Is too much reason to fear that the pence of Europ is about to ba broken by on or tne leaat Just ana least necessary wars ot uiou-ern limea. The Time heartily trusla lhat England may hold aloof. Half a doton war vessels were preparing for sea at Plymouth, and it wa reported were to go to the Bt, tiawrenoe. The 80th was Good Friday and a holiday. There Is no lator ooramerolal newt by Ih Belgian. Warlike Preparation teolnar On. Th language of the Prussian press, by evident diolation of the Government, 1 war-like, and great military preparation art being made throughout the kingdom la Austria, Ihe Qovernment 1 also taking measures In anticipation of a ooming struggle, and haa determined to put aa end to th 1'rovlsioDal Hat of affairs ia the Duohies, aod, lfneoessary, will propose that th question be referred to an European (Jongress. The Independent Beige hat newa il.., Ih. tTlna-of Prussia OBS givSO his 0OB- ent to oerlain military arrangement whiob, , tjiaU war u - D- --. most inevitable. , NUMBER 229. Th rat of dlsoouat la th Bank of Eng land remains at o per oent. , Livaaroot, Maroh 20. Th ocmmerolal new ie no later than that received by last (learner, bnt la mora in detail, nakenetd, ward Co. and Richardson, Spenoe & Co. report flour very duU. Wheat tends downward. Corn firmer and 60 higher, but was easier at the otoss; mixed, zusasu oa. The amj au thorities report- beef quiet and el tad y pork easier; bacon Ltaotiv. Lard tend downward; sales at 72j. Butter qui t and steady. " Broker' airoular report angar quiet and 60 lower. ' Coift inaotl re. Pe troleum quiet at 2a a 3a 2d for refiaed. LivaarooL, Maroh 20 Bra. Beaf easier; Daaon lnaotive ana lg lotrer on tne week. Lard ia still declining; sales at 71s72e. : Produoe quiet and atead-r. - ni . e. j. Lohdox, March 20 Eve.- Consols closed at 8U,eMij; U. S. 6-20 71a711; Illinois Central snaro ovaoui; trie an ares 661a6G Breadstuff quiet and steady. Corn is firmer and 6dal higher. 1 " Sugar quiet aad ateady. Co no firm. Te firmer. Rio (toady. Tallow .dull at 4Qsa FBOH WASHINC140N. Inspection yf the rreodmen" Bareaar. WABHINOTOK-, April 10, Mai -General Bteedman, aocompanied by atari officer and some correspondent of leading paper, will leave Bar to-day by order or m rresidenr, on an extensive in peoting tour of the operation of the Freed- mea'e llureau In all th Southern states They proceed first to Riohiaond and will extend their tour to Texas. , COLLARS- o. o. c. SEE. SEE. SEE. -1 1 'I-;'." ..... CoDgress Collar Company, 7 BOLI MAHOrAOTUBEBS (F Tfll POLISHED Bm COLLI B. Thl ! an eaUrtOjr now OolUr, (Kteated Acguit tUb, 1805, and fi only manuiactiired by thi. Can-pan.We aiaim for II tha following daoldnd adranttgita offT ALL other OoUara avar made, ellbvr plain or Mladt 1 ir lit II If mada of Iha Ben Mo. 1 linen Paper 2d- It Ii of (ha most approved atjlf, aad moulded eo that It flte tfae neck-perfectly. 8d. It Ii meriebte. May Vi worn ai a polished Collar, and then turned and worn plain. th. It Ii pollshe nnly om tho On laid. leaf-lag the Inilde free from any no lance that oan oo me off aad adhere lo ot poleon the neck. ftttl. Tr tat area Ha nt 1v ft tf paprrl-. Oth. It may be worn jury ranch longer then aav pleln Colli r, ej Itf polli bod mrf.oti which Dtoaaoiv re tin bit i n,, -,,. on the flnewt liflnen) will nut Bull eailly, Tnui It li the noel Bountiful, Dnrnble auej foliar Eeonoinleal aver offered to the Trade. We are tu well letieBed of irperloilty, that wa ehetlflfliffl any one to prod aoe a collar ai Ntai, Vu rabfo, or toomomkal, and guarantee MtUfhotlon In all oaeri. ' Sampld and Price Met sent Of on application to tbe CONGRESS COLLAR CO, ' No. 11 la Mitllo llreet, Chicago, 111, Alio Mannfaoturera of Iha Best Enameled Garrotes IN TBB BABKBT. Linen Paper Byron and Oarrote LADIES' COLLARS AND CUFFS C'ONORESM COLLAR CO. The Trad, supplied at Hanufaotorers prloMUby XXjaxri-iae car rSlgvlasx-. Noa. 107 & 109 East Town St. SOLB AGENTS FOR fOLI'MBCW, OHIO. ALSO, WHOLKALB DBALIBg IB Fancy Ueoda, Yankee Notions, Per-tn merle, ete. marSdllaw-S.WAS Dr. Stevens & Go HATn DETOT1D rirtEKM TflAOS IH 01 N-01HN&TI tothelreatmeot of Private DiM-in Tbryanarneeaoor withoni tbe nee of mtrcory, all of forme of Paivera Dieeaeai, etpeelally Ihoae of long at tiding. Lota ol eaxnal power reatored ta efeewetka. Viol I ma ot eelt-abaae and txi antra enery, en (Taring from Bp rmetorrhee, epeedili car td. PerAone at a dlttance treated bj adareaelog Dr I SI BVIWH A 0 J , rtO Wluat it , between Fifth and gliih, HrelDnetl.il. meiOOly llVtTJLStiOtEtl- OIVIN UPON TBI PIAMO-fORTI j alao Initrnotlina lo Tornl Mo-lc. Ordere leit at SaLvaan vo.'a Mo'le Store wll noelve pr .nrpt attention. t. A. OUiUHlKB. BariaBMoaa-Piofeeaor Schemer and M'. John alt m. n.a)fl-ly Pure Liberty Lead. (COPT RIQBTSD.) IITABBAHTID TO OOTBB AOBB BUBfAftB 77 ai same walibt tban any otherl Try II, I fom will have bo otherl Maavfaatnra only by i zlKULCit a oiuiin, Wnoleiale Drog, PatBt and Olaas DMlars, Me. lT oath Third street. PlB.tlJacll.elf3Aa.tda tor aala by Paint Deilere g.srally, aslggsawv -I TEBHS OF SUBSCRIPTION.: ' tauti or nn n&ar jocwub : , -. liegle flaboerlbtre, 1 yr, by M to - tingle uUorlbere, 6 moatltt, ....iiui 4 go SluKle talwr.bei. 8 oathe. c SiUKUSulKrfbera. 1 month. . aw ' SiugteaMribeiw, 1 ata'-h, delif rvi Ir,l(t a aa SiugietiDbewlbera, per wok. drilmrtati t1 02 To Af.ntet loci ti be, 16 oentt per week eecheopy. lataVBU W JB A TK.bbb1I J' 17 HIlHi, r er ... M 60 I moethe.. na aa . S moatbe , MM 1 16 1 1 month........... o 40 11MI OV TBI WSMtr fODrMAL. WngUBeUorlbtr, per year.... ft ot BOOK9. B00I1.B atatlouar-r. JOB. II. KIa,s a",,,,,, ,,. , Whol.Bal.aalB.Ull BOOKSELLERS & STATIONERS, No. 109 South IlfRli ftrect," VMON BLOgK, ' ' "" ' Ooliimbua, Ohio. " '' OonuaBtlj on band all tb. leading m Law, Medical and Srhool Bo.ki; - . - A (all Bad complota aaturlment of . , Blank Books and Stationery, PAPRK HANCIINOBv , , . . .. gfvjfirr.niv, WINOOW Bit A DUB, ,;,!. FAITIM, , , rifTtlkro and '-' flt-l'llKKFAtAatM. Wholesale and KetallV " .., MTflOCIBAPHIITCI, JOB fHf HTIM AND III.VIIIXU. B-OonatyOlgvi, Ballroadt, Btntt aa Ism-.GoBipBoi'iMipprftd. , , ... . . MaiO-Baas t COOKING STOVES. 'VHB OBEATBBT IMVBNTtOB Or TBB AOB, A. Th. fel mlaum Oeokiu. Su.l r.r .11 kiA- oooktng, without eltbr o .1 or woodl BiMmla o una la .tor nualljl Knhi Mm folloBto: , .. . TESTIMONIALS: , ooMiaaua March M, lass, , J. B. Dloeat UsarSIrt Tour bmv PetrslMBi Oaok- . logtltove hat ties la ue. B my taailly for seiB.lB. wtwki. W. aav. 'rle. It for tiaklo.. brolllo.. stow. Ing Bed all olbr ordinary parpoiM, sad 1 ass folly ' atthgfd that It vlll dMll ibc Is elaltned lor It. It I 1 w from smoke, dost or dirt, and kef osd doubt tb. bM' SBBIIB.r ttov. BOW 1b b., . t BpeotloUr roan, , 0, I. TILTOBT . . faitor High 81ml At. B Church. OOLUttnill. O.. H.tAti IT. IRAS J. B. DlaUt:' Sir'. 1 I1B.V0 n.Ml VOn. Patrnl-nm ' Btov. over six weeks. We do all the usual oooktng w'th it 1b b7 feB-lly, at a oust of tmtiilm'i ttmfptr It other a-tvabt.g.i av-r a ooal or wotd atov. mflit a. ntoltMt lo all. Verv raatwctfallf-, ? IoAAU B. rOTTB, " , Of Ihalrmaf Wm. B. Folia B Co. 3. B. Discs: Dir Sir: 1 bave' tborceablv toitsd'- tbe Pattolaqm Stova aa a banter, aad do aot hwlt.t. laaajli g that bo othor atoraor farnaoa oaa eota-para with It lor tallof a work, shop work .r .iber plaeee where flat-liooa boa. to be used. J have had chargeol Cloak BULnfaotorlee ror thepaetalxtoea rwn, and bave triad evary InvantloB for eleaallnesa aad codvobIbbc bnt never oould pvarooBia theloi. co ivrnlenca 0' dirt and oppressive beat lo Bnstmer-tlns. With job Petroleum ttoe, howa.er, Ibava-had oa of Aa oca,'iirtoMe la aiu-0itd wllk. whlla tb. aavlng or loal Is lallv aavantr-flva par cant. Very respertrolly - - . i ftu. uBiiij, uioav Bona., lusaoatb "Ighat. 1 a a a "laaecoopmr lo tbeaeeor Ibe Palrotanoi oklpe Stova II first. In tha raadlnaea with wblah ' Ihe flama ftaa bs ahBt oa th. moajrat It la wablad - bo loagar, and thos tb. lortlirr BonaoaaplloB t , Inal b. aro.Dad; and seooudlv. In tha amall aaaatltv Bad cbaapnats of tbo rnal naed. Tbay ara ai aaelly ' managadaad aaaliBB la their ooeratlona maer- dfn.ry gas-light, and do Bot rmlt th. laaat pallid. lamas, or ooaaaira aoi-i'.- mamt ai sj.Me. ft . a e,y oanaot bnt aokoowjada. il a valnabla. oonvenlaot ai d economloa! iovantion, which waoan-oot but think will toon bring It Into vary geaer-' 1 Baa, not only I . private famtllea, tot IB bwar-- fhoraa, boUla rsataor.atf, aV." Ohio flliilwiwaw. , ... "A few eventnae since wa loocd ono or thaaa naat llltle atoves tot up at onr rsaldonea, aod ' tha whola faatlv aroond th. tabla on wbioh tt waa alttlng, partaotly delighted with Ita operation. On tna aay ioiiowibs it was t aiea IB tneiaost tnoroogn manner, to. entire baking ot Satniday, Inotodiog loal b.-eed. plei, Ao , bclog accoaipllBhed 1b Ihi tlmo th.B In an ordinary atova, tha bread was baked- mwea Btoer, being aweet,Bsolal. and with uttw croat. . Tha exper.menta war. lollowed by rcaatlng craning, moiling nioit aaiiaiBotoruy." ire 'aba. preee. It Ii oartalolr ont of tha beet tbjnae aat.'t Ohio ftola Jour.ot. The la-lea are Invitee to -xaralne tbia Stova. Offloeaad gala Boast ATo. SB Aa,l State Barest. Oolnmboi, Ohio. .genie waoieo, ana uooniy mgnti ror rbi.. -' "' fcUigji .. . 1. B. CAOUB, Oea'l Ag't, . .., BAKERY..ft CONFICTIOMRI: Theo. Jone, Wholesale at Uetnll Dealer 1st: BREAD, . TRACKERS, CAKES, , . OAiUMES. i - - VHVITH, SUITS, Ac." R1KKRT lUiJBi'iiifimtnmvuv No. 836 Koulli High at., , . , fcbsv am Otalumbuai .' 0. "" MOCKINO VALLEY " ' Transportation . Linei TBI-WIKKLT LINB BBOM OOLOBBtlg TO'-Laooaater. Lona. Maleonville. ObsaB.ey.it sndAthenaaod all points oo tha Hooking Canal. Tbia Llo. la oompoaed v r - - -.-jn-. - .1 FIRST OIiASH'OAllI,!' Bnllt expreetly for tl:e trade,' and1 tf rohanM and Bblppere oan rely on their prauptntae aud afelyi. . On end after it,,,, (. i ... vi APRIL imM; .Mfc,,.. n k Boat will leave every other day for tbe abpve. named poln't. Freight reorma el onr w art n on aw ai wear aoor'i Waet end ef National Bridge. OHIa.-n Weat.i Broad atreet. , H. I1TUH BON. mr&o t Oolumbns, Ohillloothe & Portsmouth faokbt. And Fast Freight, Line.' T)AIWKNG1B TACRETS tCATl TBOM fOOT " X of Broad atrtet on Vondaya, Wedaeedeye and ' rridaje er cirelfTllle.OhlllleoUie, Jaaper, aevly (throavllle and Iortamoutb, eonneotiag MPorah, month with Btcameie fur Poneroy, OelllpUt . ronton end ell Itendlnge cm the OMo Bfver. TheBoeto are provided with lion llafei lor tha .anaaliaWnof Valnable Packegee. -, " Paeaengure will And tbie tbe moit comfortable and Dleatani mode of t rev-ling down lheotote'. Vref.li reoelved at onr Warehonirt at Keel 'bnA Weet end of National Bridge. fflce-S7 Wart , Bnd Street. 11. VIIUU SON. mrMf . . 1 !r. : .1 ... . . ,. 1 "MB KOTICE TO CONTRACTOB8. . . ........ SIALBD-'PSOPOBAbBWILI. BB BB31VBD" I y tbe Qndenlgned at tha offlet ot tba Board of Pabtte Wort., In tha elty .1 Uilombu., on MOB-'f DAT, IbeHOlb.t Apill, 18SS, betwrrn th. boars of good t o'clock P. at. of sala day, lor tba dellvwrinr sod treaklBB lima atoa. .n Ik. Matlonsl S4 b.- , twean tbe 119th and ISStb mllaa, aa numbered: weet Irom WhMllDg. Th. ana-mat to be delivered oa ths ' I dlllerent miles It aa follow,: On mllaa 10, 1st. lag and Its. SO roil eaebi oa mtloe 1M aad Its, SO rode I each: on mlt-e 1211. 181 and 1st, 60 rode each), , mltei 131, 13S, l, 1S7 and las, 9S rode eaoh. Bidden mnet iuta lbs price per rod ot 100 oehto 1 fart. The atone to be delivered Bt mob plsca, oa Ibe dtrftrent all, aa tba Be.lil.nt Inglnear may dialgnata, as t. b. br.h.a W a alaa aot HWaadlag fonr onaoia la weight. Li Bide lor tha blcakleg aod delivering Banal te Hparate. , "'iv b he right to rrf ot bids Is rtee-ved. , JOHN A. BLA1H, BV.td.nt Bnglsr. " ' Oolambas, Karob SO, ISos sunlit StateeBiBB oopy.J Ladies desiring a Clear and t .l l VVU M. i M I Tbh dallfhtfol Toilet artlota baa noeqnal for Pre.., erring and Beautifying the Oomp'ealon end Skin. Bold by Drufglati everywhere. j ' Ilepot, 74 rUIdTOL WWVOOBWt H. Y. . ftbittd&DiJeaoo, ny ETEANDEaIE. DH. ti. A. St Ft AFP, Oeejllat, trormarly of If. V.,) axclo.tvaly treats-Diarneaa, Dlaeaea. ol ih. Bye., aad In- etr. ni m. sort aINo. ISO touih High alraat, (oppoalta tha UuoCb 'C Hobh,) la Uolamboa, Ohio. Alao furalehee m,il. fall book oa lb. By. and Bar, for to cola. ol poetatMo aay addraia laotdly ; wttn mar sob . ravs. Baa' a. raa STETENSON ate PEN IV, Attorneys ai Law, II, K.tler ! Thlrsl Bt.,ClaelaaalltO via dtf wimm 1 1 oomtMT rv,vj tin V i,

1 TERMS OF jll VEHTIBISG. Bsltv Ob Sqeare. sack iMertloa .......... 0 TS . ..." ttpealel NottSS. BT square, BBOB iBMr ' 'v uob-. -...n la Local BOB BlUlBCBI HotlOM, BBS Ubb, each ioeertloa hhwmih v V Wbbut-Om DqBsra. Bao iBBvrttoa.. . . W " LocbI B&d Ba.ln.l Notice, per Ubb, , ' I , (BOB lBrUoB..-. -. 0 10 bTVii Sonera Bonn tbrae.goat.eit Bf BB (BOB f apnea la the oolnmiu of the Joubbau Marriage Botloee HOcte, wlna bbbbt Ifs tinea. Book Bad Job Printing anally and promptly ete-MM.Business Directory. B KAKEK, NUKTAN K. Attorney Lew, An) bo' mvinog, vi o.ninmn. jwn o 0 X C CI., Dealer tn Fine Tobnooo end Ogam, no. 77 soma aignii. jmuia w HOWNr.. K. M , PhjikUB and Burgeon, Hoi I OjKrft 11 DIM) UJOCIU J""' T lOITN rAIN, W. W., PbyilclaBBnd Borgeoa. ' Oaelo Neughtoa Bullllng. jangily G ANTT OA.88T. Pnotogr.pbere, Mo. ISA Bourn uigiiat. jen i lAKIrNKK. A. Jr.. M&tery Pablio, Johnaoa r Block. 117 Bon.h U'li ., jB17 If Hcuhkv, vANnRirr tvtheh, Jtenafootarere of TruDks aud VailM, Mob. 164 and lis : onto. Blgh street. . jealg em bTKTIm J. K., N bb! rerlodtoBlPealer, Prat- EL office Boililtus. i.uissm H KYI, WM. I H out ir Pablio and Ju-tloeof H1 UTI MlnNUKI. I. A.. Ol.lm Agent, 117 Bostb Ulgb .l..op. Jetnationai p -a. , j.qii iy -INDKMANN CO., Oonrectloaera and Bee- J taaraioflia. An boa' Bolldlsg. jsols ly , Peeler la From, (Undies Bad Nat., Mo lis I. Htgbel. lamoai Iff KKH KB, O. W . Notary Pnblle Bad Juit'M of 111 IVBOe, 117 BOBl mB. i JBBI1BQ1 TiAi.l.titilA noWKN. sorvtvora. Oivii Tn JT glnran and ! Blalat. AgoBUi, Mo. Watl TVOUT. Ulill. W.. iilW. PujMciiio aud Barge IB Xv 7111' ohI Rxchaugo B'k Balldlng. ran 1 1 8 H l.I.I. KM K AltU K. H . A CO., Claim Agt , 0 tvatltio ! Roh-rgpB'jt BulMlog. Janl7 6iB s ttfTlf. fit. M.. Phji'cWn ndnrgo OtBot on mat. Km tor rearm. Miidm .jr rrAl.l.M AtK, T. W.. Netftry Fob lie Oltlm J. A'l, AmboV BOUUiDg, t'7 p. ,nigo JbMui iy W ARNKKitEI.UOTr, Photogrnibfln, No. 1U7 BOO tB UlgU It. i jnio a Senator Wade Las hU dry Out Senalor Wadi baring, In big uiual calm and dispaaeionata manner, addressed gome tenguage of a mill and expogtula'ory nature toward (he President of (he United Blatea, calling lim auoh soothing games ai "emperor, despot and dictator," Air. Li, of Kansas, remonstrated with him. Mr, LtHi first propoged his own little prescrip tion by whiob the revolted States were to be brought back to "propor prao'loal relationship," &o. It is In the shape of a joint resolution, and (as we learn from ibe official report in the Qlobe), wag olaimed bj Mr. La hk as being founded npon the polioy of the President, as indioaied in his Shabkit lelter. 1 It proposes that Senators and Representatives from either of the Biales lately in insurreotion shall be admitted into Con gress whenever it shall satisfaoiorlly appear that such Btate has, in accordance with the advioe of tho President of the United Btatts, passed lawe annulling ils ordinanoe of secession, ratifying the amendment of the Constitution ot the United States abolishing slavery, repudiating all rebel debts, recognizing ihe debts of the United Stales, and extending the elective franchise to all male persons of oolor residing in the Siate over twenty-one years of age who oan read the Constitution of the United States in the English language and write their names, and also to all mal; persous of odor of like ago and residence who own real estate valued at not loss than $260, and pay taxes thereon The resolution is aocompanied by a proviso declaring that such Senators and Representatives shall possess all the quili-ficationg required by the Constitution and laws of tho United Stitos. Mr. DROWN. 1 should like to inquire of the Senator from Kansas whether he has any assurance that the President of the United Slates is of the same opinion now as he was when be uttered those sentiments Mr. LANK, of Kansas. I have no assurance from the President of the Uniloi States on this or any other subject. He then proooadoi, in that persuasive style of oratory for which he is so famous, oalling Mr. Wads to aooount for his language of theday before. This seems to have soothed Mr. Wade Into additional amiability, and he addressed the following affectionate remarks to Mr. Lank, the President, and all conoerned: Mr. WADE. I am very eorry tjsee that my friend from Kausas is so muoh exeroised this morning. 1 do not know why hie nerves should be so ebooked and shaken by anyihing Ihit I hnvo said or done. I certainly have said nothing in opposition to tho projeot of reconstructing the States, that he has now laid before us, I believe, for Ihe first time. When it was read, I thought it read very well, and I am not at all sure that I should not be willing lo aocept it. I want time lo consider il. I do not know really what is in it. 1 will not make any pledges that I will accept it, but he attacks me very violently; as Lord Hale says, "be lenpe before he comes to Ihe sills." 1 have said nothing, certainly, in opposiiion to his proposition really 1 do not know what it is entirely, but I thought it sounded very well on juMt hearing it loosely. And now, sir, it is said I made an attack on the Prrsiduut of the United Statos. As a Senator upon tbia floor, I oare no more about tho opinions of tlio President of the United State, than 1 do about those of any reepsoinble Seuatsr upon this floor, or any Senator on this floor. Who is your President, that every man must bow to bis opin ion? Why, sir, we all know him; he is no stranger to this body. We have measured himg we know his hoight, bis depth, his length, his breadth, his oapaoily, and all about him. Do you set him up as a paragon and deolare here on the floor of this tteaate that you are going to make ns all bow down beforo biro ( Is that the idea? You to Mr. Lane, of Kansas, are going to be his apologist and defender in whatever he may propose to do I Ie that the understanding of the Senator from Kansas? I do not beliove that his oonBtiluonts will be quile satisfied with so broad a declaration, that be is to wear any man's collar, and follow him wherever he may go. Did 1 nee barab language toward the President yesterday? All that I said I stand by to-dav and forever. What ws the question upon which I made those observaiions, and what. has been the opinion oi me rresiaeni ierelofore; what has been his notion ainoe? Here are three million people, our friends, friends to the Government, who generously jams forward in its difficulty and helped ns throughout the war, laortfioed their blood and their Uvea to mariniain the issue on our side, and who were faithful beyond all men that were ever faithful before, lo us during the whole of the difficulty, everywhere gisting our brave soldiers in the field, laying down their lives to maintain our principles, and ministering in every way to the mis fortunes of cur brave men whenever tbey fell into the hands of those worse than sav ages with whom we were warring; and now these men are laboring, are under one of the most frightful despotisms that ever settled down upon the heads of mankind. Three million people are exposed to ihe out rages, the insolenoe, tne murder of tnoee worse than sivsgee, their former masterr; murdered as we hear every dy, oppressed everywhere, their rights taken away, their manhood trampled unier foo'; and Congress under the Constitution or tne uniua oiates endeavors to extend to them some little pio-teotion, and how are we met here? Every attempt of your Moses bas been to trample them down worst, and to throw every obstruction in Ihe way of any relief that oonld be proposed by Congress. e Now, sir, how stands This mallet? The President of the United States did at an early period profess to be the protector, Ihi friend, the Moses of they men, to lead them from bondage lo liberty. How has he redeemed that pledge? He has from all ap- pearanoee beoomo their tnvetornte ana relentless foe, making violent war upon any member of Congress who dares raise his voice or give hie vote in favor of any measure having for its objeot Ibe amelioration of the condition of these poor people. Talk to me about the President being their friendl When did it ever happen before that a great measure of relief tosuffsring humanity on as broad a soale as this was met by the atern ve'o of the Preeident of the Halted Statea, and without being able when YOLUMK,XXVlH7"A he undertake to-make hi gbslruwtioar- te our maaaurea la defli.nata a ainsle elauae of the Constitution .that he pretends baa bsi n violated, my Lord Coke used to say that fraud lurketh in generalities. - Look through that message, and in not a single p aoe oan he pot hie Soger npon anything that looks like a violation ot ue Loueiita tion of the United Slates. There ie nothing in Ihe bill that looks as if it had fox ita ob-tot anyihing exoept the means of afford ing sorue little relief lo these poor people, thiio friend ef oura, wheav we ar ander the highest 'obligations that ean devolve upon mortal man to see defended agrtinst their morial enemies. How Baa tne rreei- dent redeemed hia nledcee? ' i r Mr. 4,ANK, of nansss. Tue Benator yes terday used this language: "Tne ieeue the Preeident has made wMi Congress, the quarrel he hag picked with Coogrees from the very oommenoemeu Ik nothing more or lees than- on the question of recognising and permitting rebels to oooupy their old plaoes on tnis noor, for ins utter destruolion of the. Government in, my judgment and beltgf."f) M t ... J - I ask th Senator from Ohio to point to a single expression, either oral or written, in whiob the Preeident of the United Slates has advised, advocated, or nrged the admission fit other than truly loyal men upon Ihe floor lor cither branoh of Congress. I Mr. WADB. I wee answering the ques tion in the first plaoe with regard to hia treatment of our friend in the Booth, lhter million people, rear he made a violent ae- seult upon the Conetilution and an aesault upon the power of Congress In thess repeat ed vetoes that art totally destitute of any reason that he can assign foresaw, lie did say earlyj I1 edhril, inVthV UnKsSeV t be- leve that the Senator has set fortn in the proposition he has just submitted, that he would be favorable to some terms wttn tness People, that tbey should have votes if they were aute to react ana write, li incy came up to oerlain qualincatloos. we alt be lieved that he waa willing todoluslioe by these people; but the moment that we un dertake to do anything toseoure their right, we are met by his siern hostility, denying them everything, denying their oititenship, denying their right to have oitizenehip ex tended lo tbem, vetoing our bills beoause they endeavor 10 solve ' the doubt' whelh r they are eitiiens or not, determined that now, henoeforth, and forever, there ehall be an inferior olaai of people, trampled under foot, without the right of oitiaenahtp, and' without Ihe power of Congress to make Ihem oititens. That is the way that this Egyptian relief I extended tti these "men that he pretended he was friendly to. .Yes terday what wag the iaeue? I wag charged with great oruelty on this floor, because I was unwilling to wait lor. ieoruiis to ne brought in her for the purpose of overthrowing the ground we had taken upon this important question whether these poor people ehall have relief or not. Now, I wish to say that t am wlHing to extend courtesy to Our old associates on this floor under other olroumatanoes; bat when you entend this courtesy to them the result is death and destruotion to thros million people trampled under the feet of their former masters. - My courtesy is extended to those poor men, and I would not wait a moment that their enemies may be brought in here in order to prevent our doing anyihing for their relief, joining with the President who ig determined, if we may judge by hia acts, that no measure having for ita objeot any relief shall bs extended to them.- i . Liok at your frivolous second veto mes sage, and tell me it is good faith, will you 1 Did you hear the foots stated here -lite other day, that bills were drawn with a view to esoape the anathemas of your President, and exhibited to him, and he asked ii he had any objection to them, to look thorn over well, " because if we oan, consistent with ihe objeot aimed at, make them cleir of any objection you may have, we will do it." The aeeret motive in his own heart was never divu'eed lo mortal man until the treasures were passed through Congress, and then eternly met by bis veto. Is that good faith? And you talk about-his respectability toward Congress I What did be say to that secession rabble that met aim on tne nua or KAhrnarjr f m om- i inenoed any assault on him? Had any man uttered a word disrrspeotful of Ibe President, when he belched forth those anathemas against th majorities of Congress b Mr. LANE, of Kansas. Had not the Sen alor from Massachusoitg denounotd him as having sent into tbie Senate a "white-wash ing message I ana not ine teaacr oi ine House of Representatives declared that it be had lived in early times, in England, he would have been hanged as a U iitor, before that speech was made Mr. WADE. Does the Senator look upon that ns a justification for an attack upon the power of ihe people as expressed through a nmjority of their Congress, amounting to two thirds of it? Suppose I, in inlomperate language, as you say, had assailed the President unwarrantably, would that authorize him lo viait upon your bead and the heads of other Senators Ibe stigma of being dts unionists, leagued with the enemy to break up this Union? Is that friendly oounsel from your x.xeouuver ion say you uro going: to defend all hie meaaurcs; you are his apologist for anything he has done, or anything be may do. I did say, air, that he seemed to have meditated a controversy with Con gross from the beginning, and be bas. He has treated our majorities as hos tils to the people; two thirds of both branches of Congress has been treated by bim at mere factionist., disunionisls; enemies lo ibe oountry bent npon Its destruction, leaguing with the enemy to destroy tne Government. This is Ihe way the President has treated Congress, and every bill tbey have passed which promieeu any relief to the men whom we are bound to pro-teol, has boen trampled under tho executive heel; and even when members of this body did what I aay they ought not to have done for I do not approve of my brolher Trumbull' going up lo the President, when he has a measure pending here as a Sena'or, to ask Ihe Preeident, in tbe first plaoe, whether he will approve ot It or not; even when he woe asked If he objected to-lbis measure, and made no objeotion, he still undertakea to veto it. Your President, in order to trample down Congress, if he eotild, and to destroy and override the rights of tbe States, ha readied hie executive arm into States in older to oarry e'oo-tions in bis favor, and rent his myrmidons tbore to proolalm his will and his wlBhee and to argue the queetlon pending before the males or mis union, ne proieBeiusj to u. a Btalea rlghtg manl 'there is a point l nnl van. air. to defend him UDin. . If von aav our side went to him lo get his opinion to carry Into Connection!, I say that tney ougnt not to nave uone it u wvj attempted it. It was stooping from that dlo-niiT whlnb should ever obaraoterise Cougress ana tne priae aua iuiblukouo. vi a Btate, lo msxe any aiiempt 10 ci i j State by exeontive innuencs or uioiuuou. Nv a.r. if newsnaner reports may be re lied upon I do not know t'tat they oan be he haa don worse than that; be hag been tampering with members of legislative hod aa in order to extend hi influenoe there and bring over men to sugtain his side of this queetlon there. Thl. la .11 fir nlav. ie It? When I aay that he i endeavoring to override and glander and libel members of Congreea and avan two thirds of both Houses, and be- cause I denounoe that on tbe floor of this Senate, am I to be arraigned by an apolo gist of th President, by one who proclaims himself to be his defender, and who is com missioned, for ought I know, to defend him hare and elsewhere? I spoke yesterday of the President's usurpation, and I ask again what business, what constitutional right has th President of tbe United State to teach his exeoniive arm into any Slate, seceded or not teoeded, tost tun aivll covernifflnt there? If any lawyer of thl body oan find any warrant for eueh an aot in the Conetltntion, I will take back all that I have said about it. But, air. vou cannot find it there. The rresi dent la a mere executive offioer, bound to obey our mandates and our behests tn this pirticular, having no right to have any will of hi own on the subject. If during iha vacation of Congress ke thought It wa expedient and urgently nrceaeary that these Siatee should be brought book into th Union, he eboold have convened th National Legislature to take that question into consideration. H had bo power oa t.A'l'Oc.iiJ Dmug: 'li, .tle'O.r i ir'rt - r?r-Tt--rz r-r-fT od1 earth, Bo SoinlIlla,BO color of author- ity for undertaking to reorganise them and . bum Ibega hens for admission., ' Wh it di 1 he do? He let th whole long vaeation run over without making any effort to coavone Congress, or. in any way insinuating that he .wanted In oounsel'of Oengiw o the-subject; bat behind their backs and m their abeence we find htm dic tating to lb States, for he oalla them States, and he say tbey are fh the Union and have nover been out of the Union. If they have ot been out of 'the Union, 'as he. alleges, then be is the molt bold usurper who ever uudertook to aooumulate unwarranted power in hie own bands. What right haa he to go into any State rcfj this Union Bad die-place the Governor that has been elected there 7 What right has hs lo put by and overrido the Legislature of any Blt.le of this Union? He has done it. There is not a State now south of us, except Tennessee, that is not a mere creature of executive power. Tbe people there never moved lo regain their relations with tbe General Government exoept as they sure moved. by Ihe executive arm. ITkey hav sent.ua Be petitions, they have had no meetings to oonsider (he subject among themselves; but your Executive Chief, holding those States under tbe military power of Ihe Govern ment, they being under martial law, and the habeas emnu being overridden, the military breath being there the law ef Ihe land, oommanded tbem lo form oonstitu-Hos; -and tiigy were lot even accoided Ihe poor, miserable privilege of making them acoording to Iheir own will, but nnder tbe bayonete of tbe conqueror tbey were order ed to make their constitutions, and be sent it is .orient i then telling' them what pro- vltlobe they -muat mage in inoee uonetitu- lions. Do you deny that? Hue he not told Ihem over and over again, if you make your constitutions without such ana such provisions you, will sot be admitted in Congress? ig that according to Amcrioan prinoipleg f Bad as these men are, seces sionists as I know them to be nioetly, I say you cannot make an American republioau Stat out of that material, and In that way. until these people oan agree toaaaemoie themselves together and make suoh constitutions as will accord to that of the United States, and ,aek to resume their relations wit. tM General Government under suoh oonetitutions, they can have none. If the President bas found fault with Congress beoause they did not, at his breath, when they first assembled, admit these States into theUn'OB and'a'low their member back lato Congreea, and if we sre to bo oonstant- ly anathemallsed by htm for not doing It, it is because he intende to have them come in here resuming their old plaoes. What haa hs done to discriminate ? 1 ask the Senator to tell me I say these usurpations are unwarrant able. The President has oensnred Con-gioss from Ihe beginning, although at the vory first moment that we had time to deliberate en the subject after Congress convened we raised a great eommiUee for the purpcBe of taking it into eonsideralion, and while we were doing it he was oensuring ns as having oreated an irresponsible oen-tral despotism herb. Did tbe man believe it? Defend him if you oan. Did the Pres ident of Ihe United Stales bellevo the charge when he accueed Congioss with de liberately getting up an lrresponeiDle central despotism totyranlze over this Government? If he did not believe it, whero does it plaoe him? Judge ye, and defend him if you oan. lie said it was an irre sponsible despotism "direotdry" was ibe word an irresponsible cerfBiLiitrcotory, dangorous to the liberties or the people; and what wns il? A mere oominittee of Congress, the oommonost thing in tbo world, nn instrument made use oi by con gress to ascertain tbe very fnets that tbe President ought to havo wanted to know as muoh as we did if be wanted Iheso Biales properly reeouelruoted. What tight had be on the subject? ,' Rarely nothing. Hut had we bad tne Itgnt ne preieoueu to nave, suon as it was'' ' Even now he dare not say in is proclamation of peace that theBe peo ple are ready lo resume their relations with tbe Government. If ihey have not done hat is neoceory, bo piopnesies urn mey -tin do it. Uo kooirs noiuing about it, or f he does know about 11, bo knows that that flood of testimony brought from ibis great oommitteobns enlightened everybody uppn tbe facia, aud that there is no one of these States (bit is ready to resume her re-lations with the Goreramenl, or can do so, because Ihey are yet hostile lo the Government. He eomplaincd of us for not letting n those g-overnments while ho stood over tbem with tbe bayonet aud dared not withdraw his troops; when martial law perva ded every inch of their territory. We wore blamed for not lotting in nere a euouucu and hoslile people that were kept under the ban of oxcontivo tliotatiou. upon the prin- iplcg that he, the Commandor-in-Chief, should dictate. That is what we were oen- sured for. What else was tbore in It I I am reminded by alienator near me that his organs are threatening us day by dy with the bayonet. We are to be driven out of here. I see it everywhere. Mr. Voor- hces, of Indiana and you know what a loyal man he is a man, I believe, who it oame out on a luatoiat inveeugaiion in uinv Btnte was the keeper of the reoords of Ihe Knights of the uoiden ciroie, wno nan formed themselves Into a hostile oommunily, and had joined the rebsls lo overthrow the Northern otaies Mr. HENDRICKS. Will the Senator al low me to interrupt him? i M. WAUK i os, sir. ! Mr. HENDRICKS. I Bay that the obarge which he now makes against Mr. Voorboes ig not sustained by any reoord, and I give it now a square denial. r.Mr. Wape at this point suspenaea nis remarks until certain unfinished business was disposed of, when he oontlnued :' Mr. WADE. I was nearly through tbe remarks I proposed to make on this sudden outbreak. As tbe President, without any oauss on eurlb, has censured Congress and aoouscd thorn of having erected a doepotism here, though it was nothing more than an ordinary oomraittee for the purpose of taking testimony to enlighten us upon the subject of legislation that wa must outer upon or tne most important canraoi.or, ioi ine rofor to his own oonduct to ehow the quo animo more perfeolty. We had, it seems, besought him to lay before Congress that evidenoe which bo himself had, and nobody else had; and how did he meet it? I believe and let gentlemen of Ihe committee cor- reot me if 1 am wrong it waa more than two months, and after three several appli cations to him, before we oould extort from him the very evidenoe witnout wnion con gress could not slit hand or foot on this subject. He had th constitutions lhat he bad diatated; Coogresa had never seen ono of them. lie had other -muniments of their titles to be Stales, if States they are; and while he stood before tue rabble there, Boouiins CongreBS of being despotic and at- lamntine- to ovirthrsw the Government, be was wlthhoiaing tne very eviueuo. wjmm which Congress oould neither stir hand nor fool. Waa that candid? Other eenators have been much more fortunate than I have if ihey have been able as yet to sea one single constitution of these reconstructed Hiaiea that we are lold are all in orderto-day. What ara Ihev? Apologists of the Preaidonl, ooodeaoend lo loll us what are Ihe oonsiuu- i lona of these reconstructed states of yours I saw from th papers that diver orders went down to their conventions requiring them to do this and Ihe other on the peril that ihey would not be admitted here; but where Is tne auinenuo evidence oi now thev same out of il, and what thoy did do, and what they are? The President lays Ihey are reooustrucled Slates, with all th rights, powers, and lmmuaitios of Slates, with n ri.nt 10 aiaim ail tn. riKuuui rela tion of th unaeeeded Btate. How dees hs know it? How do w kuow li? When a Hint, la lo be gdmitled into Ibis Union, everybody knows th first ibing is for lhat Btate, after it nas neon pormmeu w uumv In hero bv Congress, to furnish us with the constitution that the ptopls themselves, un biased bv executive dictation, nave auopteu as lbs will of the people, that wo may see whether it ia republioan, whether It squares with th Constitution of th United Btatts, and whether It i proper for us to admit ibam hare. Congress passe judgment upon it. It i not lb President lhat admit Sta'es; it Is tbe United StaUs. Tbe United Slates, say the Constitution of th United State la thundering tones, .shall Judge at linn j s fl U- 1 'it- .... .t ...... ,. Columbus, 3 ohio. Wednesday morning, tbem-fbrm Of korarnli ot the Preai- dent of th United 8tatc s. It I Congress, the true representative of the sovereignty of this great nation, anl it reel and abides nowhere else.' The doctrine that -ylelde everything- to the Eieoutive and nothing to Congress ie Ihe most slavish, dootrine that waa ever propagated la B uovernment pretending to be free. You cannot tell no to day what tho constitutions of theso reoon glruoted Slates are; but you do knew that ihey are not gotten up by a people free lo act precisely as they wanted to act. iney war nnder martial law, as I (aid beforo, under executive dictatioa, under the bayo net, and under ihe orders of your Lxeeu live Chief, promulgated to his suborlinate officers to osrry into effeet. Do you eay that an American constitution can be built upon euch a foundation as thalr , Mr. President, It was these things that I brandedV A usurpations. . It was for these things that I declared that the President of Ibe United State wga eodeavoring lo over throw the constitutional powers of Cingreai aud, lo eretlt a despotism upon its ruins; for Ihe moment it shall be admitted' in 'the Congress of Ihe Uoiled Slates that these immense- powers belong to in exeouuve arm of Ihe Government; inetead of lo us, tou have a .despotism and nothing but a despotism, we have not even the power of Ihe lrgvslatlve body that meets in r ranee. Theso States have destroyed their connec tion with this Government by a four years' War to overturn il; Ihey have disorganised their uwu tt Constitution, have annul. led them all, trampled tbem under foot, have got up new constitutions hostile lo this Government, under new ohiefe, new relationships, Bod entirely destroyed their gonneotiou with the union, ana then when vou Dut tbem down at the point of Ihe bayo net, where do they gland?. Certainly not on their old constitutions, because If Ihey did bow oould President Johnson attempt to declare who might be voters and who might attempt to exercise the elective iraocoise there? 1 say if thee Statea are all stand. ing oa tbey were, originally, how came il that he even wantel lopresorine wnosaouid be voters and who should not? Answer that fur him, girt Tell me why he denies Ihe power lo iheas S'ates, if they are States Of the Union to prescribe Ihe conditions upon wbioh men shall sxeroise ihe eleotive franchise or by what right did he diotate to them on that eubjeot? were they Btaicsr Did he do ii? ' And if ho did, was it not a usurpation, in his own language' sir, these absurditios cannot bs orowded down Ihe throats of a free Congress. All these inoonsiatencics aro bo manifold, so utterly new to the principles and legislation of Amcrioan government, mat inoy Droatue nothing nut the spirit ot despotism, xne people will not permit it to be done. , ,. You say that the party is crumbling to pieoos. If it is, eo much the worse for this Govornment. If Congress should recede from the position Ihey have takon to claim jurisdiction over this great question of re admitting meae siaiea, irom mat nour taey surrender all the power that tho Constitution plaoes in their hands and that they we.e sworn lo eupport, and they are tbe mere slaves of aa accidental Exeontive; of a man who formerly associated with us on this 11 -oi; who was no mors infallible than the rest of ua poor mortal;) and yet Ihe moment, by death or acoidont, he is plaoed in tbe exeoutive chair, it would seem as if acme Senators believed him to lie endowed with enperhumnn wisdom and onght to bo invested with nil the powers of this Goreramenl, that Congress ought lo get on their kaeee before him, and take his insults and his diolation without resentment. and without oven an attempt to resist. Some Slated may Bend suoh instrumentalities here, but God knowa.somewillnol; and I pity those that do, for they would hold their freedom on a reruucertain tenure. - Hut, Mr. President, 1 hav pursued this oourso of argument long enough. It may be that hereutter during the session 1 shall endeavor, iu a more deliberate and orderly nminer, to set Iheir sins in order before some men in high authority that have ao- cueed ua of treaBon hero. Some gentlemen mav liapniUnt Mlr tbe charge of treason, perhaps tho more so becauso treason is becoming popular in this day; but. sir, I am a little loo obi f ishioned to be obargd by tho executive branch of tbis Government as a traitor on the floor of Congress, and not resent it. 1 do not oare whether he be King or l'residout that insinuates that 1 am a disuniomst or traitor, siana- ng upon tho same Infamous platform with ho traitors of the Souih, 1 will not take it from any mortal man, high or low, without repelling the ohirge. If auy man here is tame enough to do it, he ia too tame lo be toe Soualor of it proud-soii-ited people, oon- scious of their freedom. I olaim to bo their representative, aud they will oonsure me if Ihey do uot like my doctrine. It will not ooino from Kansas. 1 will settle it with my own constituents. I fought your battle for you, sir, turning to Mr. Lane, of Kansas, and saved your State in ptrtfrom a slavery worse than that in tbe Southern States, and 1 will save It again it its representative proves recreint lo it Aud now, Mr. President, I wish to make an appeal to those great, patriotic statesmen on this floor who, by their love of principle, by Iheir unswerving honesty, uneo- duocd by the bianaisnnients or exeouuve power, unawed by threats of violenos, stand here to defend the right of the people upon this floor, and will stand hore forever. 1 ay to you, Senators, we, Ihe majority who aro stigmatised as traitors, are the only barrier to-dny between tbia nation and an archy and despotism. If we give way, the hope of Ibis nation is lost by the reoreanoy yen, sir, 1 will say ine trcacsery or aman who betrayed our oouftdeuce, got iuto pow er, and bits goue into the oamp of the enemy, and joined those who never breathed a breath of principle in ooramoo wun us. ' Now. sir, raddressiug Mr. Lane, of Kan sas. if your nerves were unstrung by what 1 eata oetore, x uops inoy win oe oaimeu Dy what 1 havo said now. riughtor.l I say, Senators, you are th hopo of tho people. On vour oourago aud oonstanoy the p:ople rely. You bear tho destinies of this great and free nation not forever for although we should turn our backs and betray our constituents, thcro is behind us a brave people who will vindicate their rights, wbothor we aro reoreant or not. fTrannlated from ttis German by Cgiarlol flrobs. JOHN NIKAl'MX Al HIS HOPUlli Strauss is a second Orpheus, whoa ten- dor-moaning, spiril-sliriug, love kissing music conn tiers the most inveterato enemy of Ternsiohore : whose magio sounds soothe and move tne stones memseivos. mrauss has written waltzes that are more to me than opBras. In seven of his msasurcathere ig often more melody, than in as many heavy scores of other musioians. What a fullness of av ren beauty, what a rich mind of poetry, what an inexnausitu.. louut ot ever gunning melody I And not the melody alone ibe rhythm also with magioal influences atiie the brain and enters tho heart. His violin is a talisman, by which be draws from the demhs of tbe uuav.n soul bright est ior. and deepest woe, and mingles them with master band. The bow wilh wbioh he draws these many-oolored tones from his instrument ie a magical wand, whlohtouoh- kb the grief-torn soul with the healing bat earn of joy and lends ber wings to mount up into heaven or peaoo. in. re are waits-nnmDositions as rich aa melody, but few in molting rhythm as those of Slrausa by tiinea skipping, numuiing;, '.wauzing, lidlue and dancing, so inviting, so irro sistibls, that no danoer oan withstand their influence. He is lb idol of women. In every house, on every piano in Vienna, lie Strauss' waltzes. - He has written over (wo hundred, all are favorites, all are sung and trilled, and played throughout Europe. We bear them in Ihe street, at the ball, in iha irarden and at the theater. The dano- log Viennese carry him on their shoulders and shout: "Sirauaa forever." This Strauss, Ibis wapt-hero, leved the dauarhter of a ooiint : Sophie was her name Her ey was bluer than Haley's heaven, and goiter than tne sweon "guv ui uio vv.uiu .i. (irnoe end beau'v war In every motion, and musio In every tone. Iu a word, HonbiB wa beautiful, dtiillngly beautiful. He would hav gives world I hav won but tns glance of love, but aha waa oold and alern. Madness, inueeu, ior a poor must 0 no, wild Doming doi nil noun, ra oera w lore tun iitgn-Dora oopnif, wno du i nobis anoetlore, aa he had walttet, ! ."' a : i . , "Impertinent I" (aid Sophie; as dwhen be csme to give her brother a lesson on the violin, ghe goaroely deigned bim a look Shortly afterward Sophie was betrothed to Count Robert, Lord Chamberlain, who had indeed as many proud ancestors as sopnie, bat beyond these and his lilies, had nothing of which he oould boast. Uw day when Strauss ohanced to be alone with Sophie, he sank upon hi knees telore her, and with burning words declar ed hia love, and besought her lo give bim but on word ur lock of love, ere he was quit driven lo despair. Rut neither tears nor prostestations moved - her eh wa oold and unfeeling as marble.- "I am an affianced bride," she said haughtily, " and if I were no', think you, I would beoome the wife of a poor musician I " She turned aoornfully away, and left him alone in big grief and despair. The repenlanoe which soon .wok, in the heart of Sophia, unhappily cam too late. The bridegroom and her father hastened the gurriago; in eight days she would be the wife of Count Robert. The oeremony was to be performed in the great saloon of Ibe oity, and th Count oalled oa Strauss to lead the orohestra on that ooca- sioa, and honor his bride with th composition of a new walls ' Strauss, the most miserable man in Golo uuiverse, promised them both; " He wishes to wound me yet tb more deeply," said the unhappy man to himseir, " nut I forgive mm, and may ehe be happy may alio never re pent ber choice.'' t He addressed himseir earnestly lo bis work. This waits should be the interpreter of his passion and big grief to Sophie, it should obauenge at leaat nerptiy, if notner love, n hen all the great city aiepL mrauss took his violin, opened his window, gazed out into the oold night, and improvised and moaned forth bie sad lale of woe, to the sweet slars above that looked kindly down tbe desolate and beart-strioken. The day of tbe wedding came at last. This neroe agony of love hail given him a want, every measure of wbioh Bpoke of longing sorrow, a wailing: woe. The hall glistened and shone with bright jewels and brighter eyea ; put S opble waa more gloriously beautiful than all. The riohest gems left their charms and their luster; the pur myrtle wreath bloomed in her gelden hatr, and the rare andeosily bridal veil shaded her beautiful features from full gaze of Ihe ador- ng orowd. tstrauss, a haggard, emaoiated man, wilh brilliant, piercing blaok eyes, sharp, strongly-marked features, dressed from head to fcot In black, as though he had assumed tbis mourning livery for thl bride now dead to him, stood sad and silent in the gallery above, directing the movements of the orchestra. Bcphie danoed bow with one, and now another of the wedding guests, and ns ofien as she paused after the giddy whirl of tbe danoe, she turned her eyes toward the pale, grief-stricken Strauss, in Us robes of sorrow and mourning, and met bis piercing look of despairing love. I it is more than pity she lett it was re morse. It was kindling love. A terrible pain awoke in her heart, like the swelling stream, growing ever wider and deeper, threatening te overwhelm and destroy her quite, uiadiy he would hav went, but ahe dared nor. it sounded twelve o'olook, and Strauss gave the signal for the performanceof Iho new waits The gay danoers stood up, sopnie on tne arm of the happy bridegroom. All stand spell bound with the wonderous wilohery of those magio sounds. They forgot lo dance they gszed wonderingly at lite pal man in blaok, whose grief-lorn soul breathed out la woe through tbe sounding strings or nis instrument. His bow moved, with his heart went his spirit. The bridegroom led off they dance and dance. Strauss follows th Hying piir with tearful eyes, torn heart. They danoe, and danoe, and dance, and will never cease. Btranss plays, aud plays and ill never stop this wonderful walls, which so fearfully allects both him and them. They anoe and dance; ne plays ana piays ua- denly the E of his violin snaps, and in that mome.nl, Sophie falls dead on the floor. Vio lin and bow fell from his trembling bands, nd with a cry of horror, he shrieked, " nhia " fall tmlniin nn thm tluOr. Bino. oupuie a ueady the wall, is called by bar name; Strauss loved her till his death. lo loo, is now dead, out nis onjraiiug oopiu. alts lives yet. Tbe oaso of Tennessee, and the reason hy Congress has anted with wisdom and prudenoe iu delaying Iter restoration, were well stated by th Hon. W, B. Btokes, M. C. elcot from that State, in a speeoh at a Republican meeting in Conneatiout last week, from which we extract the following: "Why. then, aro these States not admit ted? Dioause they hare not compiled wilh the President' own requirements, Hut ennessoe has; why ie sue not admitted f will tell you. Congress asked for evi denoe as to these Slates. It asked for the proolamallous, constitutions, documents, laws. The President never sent Ihem to Congress until Maroh. But meanwhile it had been gathering prooi irom omer quarters, and at length it was just ready to admit Tennessee. Theu ooo branch of the Legislature was disorganized, and the rebel element, dot being willing to submit lo the rule of the majority, sought to break up anu destroy the Government. They left the House without a quorum, aua it ie sun wna- out a quorum. And I say that while the Government was in lhat condition, there is not man of you who would think lhat State should be rooognizel. Wo therefore do not oomplain or 1110 delayi ne know that admission now would destroy lbs Union element of those Biales. Congress is doing right in holding then back. When the rebel armies hrst surrendered, mere was everywhere a disposition toward loyalty, but 1 stand hore to-night to say lhat there is now a feeling as dsep and bitter toward the Union men of the South, as there ever was in 1800 or 1881. And the faois have proved that Cougrecs, in its oool and deliberate treatment of the matter, deserves the thanks of all the Union men in giving pportunity for these rebels to show tneir hands. Time will show that Congress was right. But all these things will be settled wisely and safely, and whoa loyai men get oonlrol of these governments, there will then be no dffioulty, and all Iheae questions will bt satisfactorily settled. Rush of Herman from IIr, Ham bars; ernel llrrmon. Tho number of emigrants from Germany arriving at Havre to take ship for Ameri ca bag lately managed in an extraoruinary degree. A Havre journal atatos that there are not lees than a thousand emigrants now lodging in th quarter of Saint Francois alone awaiting vessels to take them out. Two days sinoe eighty parsons left Havre for England in tne nope or getting on ear lier. ror 14 vonap. Jjonaon ucraia The same iournsl remarks mat this in crease of emigration ooinoides with a great extenelon of the commercial relation be- twoen Franoo and the United States. Not less than twenty-five vessels are shortly ex-peoltd at Havre from New Orleans, on from Texas ana nv rrom jioono ait iaa- en with cotlon. A considerable quantity of the same material is also being shipped for Havre at New York, along with other merchandise.. In short, the import trad at Havre has not been so brisk for fly years past. '; Ihe llerlin oorresponaenoo iaiarcn 121.n1 of the London Timoa says: The emigration t North Amerioa Is daily assuming greater nnrnorllons. Uo to the end of May, 10,000 perioos have alroady engaged to leave via Hamburg and Bremen, Th emigrants are nearly all Northerners and Protestants, whereas, ten years ago, tho vast majority consisted of Southerners, many of them Ro man Catholios. A ourlout oolleetlen of autograph letter, addressed to the lale Lady Vleasington bv artists, literary men and others, ha just been sold at auotion in i.onuon. it inoiua- . .. . 11 aw.11... t .1 eu letters trotu ..luvio, uu.11.jr, uauuseoi, Diokena, Maoready, Bulwer, Disraeli and manv other oelebrlties, Thero were also some extraordinary relies in th ahape of looks of hair ef distinguished persona; among others, Luoretla Uorgia, the Duke ol Wellington, mra nsison, uonnteea uutooi- oil and Mra. Hemane. At an auotion sal at a oonvant In Paris, i -'b- .. .... Ight hundred pounds of hair shorn from uuu8 ft...D ":Z th veil lno 1810, brought 0,000. JOURNAL. april h. isgg. TELEGRAPHIC. REPORTED FUR THE JOURNAL. FBOM NEW TOBK. Uewrgja Peaaadjr t'oiulnc ! Anorira. Nkw Yobk. April 10. Mr. Geo. Peebody write by tb last atcamer that he intend to Ink ptssage for New York in ibe steamer Bootla, which leaves Liverpool on th 10th of April. Cl'lef Jwatlee Cbnae on th Civil BlghU Bill and Unlvaraal BuBrngr, A publio meeting waa held laat evening in BL I'aul s ni. is. cnuron in mis oity, un der Ihe auspices of th Ladies Uentennary Association. Chief Justice cnase presiueu, and Bishops Janes and Simpson delivered addresses. The Chief Justice in tbeoours of bis remark alluded 10 the passage of th Civil Rights bill, and olaimed that th next t'-p ahou d be to give th ballot to th emancipated slavca. An argument took place before Judge Clarke,at Ihe Supreme Court chambers, yes terday, between tbe Hudson River Railroad Co. and their former attorney, Thos. st. North. The latter waa removed from office, aud it ia alleged took away the legal paper of ihe corporal Ion, refusing to give them bp uutit oosis should be paid. rnnrral of Oen. Ihornlow. The funeral of the late Gen. Thornton, U, 8. A., will take plaoe in this oily to-day. TheCoafederailon Kxelteaneat las Mew HruiwwleJf. Th Herald' Fredrlokton, N. B., apeoial anys : In Ibe upper House yeilorday morning Ue anti-oonftderalion minority pre suited a protest agalnBt the resolution of rridsy and th address to th yueeu. The iowor House adjourned. At. tnree o'olook lo-day, tho members of tbe Government who have boen in oonsultatlon all day will, it is reported, send in their resignations. The exoiiement la sun very 111, ifnvw nvivnm n .......I r. . . The Herald's Fortress Monro speoial says: Kumor at jrorirees Monroe wnispers that Jeff. Davis ig to be removed lo Riohmond on a writ of hibeai corput. Fears are enter tained mat be oannot lire through the coming eummor, ir not released, as nis health is growing worse. Monetary Announcement. Tb Herald's Money Article oontains the following: We understand that the inter est on the -temporary loan now on deposit will be reduoed fire per oent. otter the first proximo, and in me oase or Clearing iiouae certificates, to four per oent. This, at leaat, measure imperatively catted ror. in view of the large amonnt on deposits, and us UBelessness to the Treasury. Ihe Fenian Bena In Beaelon. Th Fenian Senat met in tbie oity yes terday and is in secret session. Naval Matron. The Powhatan, Monadnook, Tusoarora, and Vanderbilt remained at Valparaiso at tbe latest dates. The Mohongo and Niatlo were still at Callao on the 22d ult. The St. Mary's was still at Panama, and there were rumors lhat she was soon to bt laid np on ordinary. Th Wateree, boaring the flag of Rear-Admiral Pearson, sailed from Panama on the 28th ult. for Callao, where the Admiral ia to meet hi now flagship, th Powhatan. .reparation to Roeelvo Btfhen. There waa much exoiiement at Uaicn Square Headquarters yesterday. The Fenian dignitaries were busily engaged in making preparations to receive the great Head-Center Stephens, who is to arrive on the Havre steamship due nt Ibis port tc-day. James Stephens' vi-.it to this oountry will be of ehort duration, depending entirely on bsolute and pro-determined arrangement. The real cause of his viait will be with held till the eve of hia departure. Tho Mporlinn- ateaaon Bog-an. The nrat trot of the segBon takes plaoe at the Fashion Cnnrap 11.1- - -.-slako of $1,6(X1, mile heats, best three in 6 to in harness, between Lady Jonea and Rookland Bey. The t'onviilrnforantttie Dry Tortus;. 'Anelr sjoniiition ana MnpaiiB. The government transport, Eliza Han- ocok, from Galveston on the 22d us) , touching the Florida coast, brings to Fortress Monroe several discharged prisoners, and news of Dr. Mudd, Arnold, Spangler and Col. Marmaduke. Dr. Mudd is kept under close guard, and oompelled to oleon out th bastions and oasemates oi tue lort, anu uo Ihe menial work. His oonBtant prayer is for dealh. Arnold is employed as clerk for Captain Van Reed, Post Adjutant. A guard attends bim to bis meala, wbioh are the game as are provided for the other prison ers, and at night be is kept in oiose ousted y. Spangler is at work in the Quartermaster's oarpontcr shop. He ie robust and jolly, aud his oondtlion he attributes solely lo his being innooout 01 any puruoipaviou in the dreadful orime charged against him. Col. Marmaduke. found guilty of the noted conspiracy lo froe Ibe prisoners of Camp Douglas and burn cnioago, ubb snargs ui Ibo post garden. Ki-jolclac ovr tbo Pnmaareor the Civil Rlg-ntH Bill. A salute of 100 gun will b tired thl morning by the Union League Club of Union Square in honor of the passage of the Civil Rights bill by Congress. 1HOS NEW OBLr ANS. Market. Nxw Oblbans, April 9. notion (a ouiel: gales 2.700 bales: re ceipts to-day 2,245 bales; low middling 84) a8(io. Sugar fully fair at 14 Jo. Molasses nominal. Flour 17 76. Corn, mixed ana yenow, 80a82jo, Oats 60o. Tobaooo, fair, 14al6o. i'ork zo. iiaooa snouiuers ioo. Oold 26. Sterling txohang 82. New York oheokg dieoount. Fraigbt to New York 102. Tha General Blew. Th steamers Gen. Cromwell and Merrl- mao from New York have arrived. Numerous attaeka ara made in this oity by alung shots and oitisens robbed. Many lunaties are abroad. These robbers and insane men were freed from prisons and asylums during the war, and oome from all parts of the oountry. Tne water orevasso is Deiug Bugoeamu', olosed. Th upper crevasse is too wide to close, but the Ihe ends of the lower are secured.The Methodist Conforenoe is discussing Ihe Eplsoopal vetoes and noti6oation by conference. Union prayer were made, and Sunday generally observed. SiiagvtPoRT, April 4. Very little oolton rooeived from the inte rior. The demand ia good and pnoe an-vanoed.LITER FROM EUROPE. ' Humor of War" In Europ. Coboobd, Mb., April 10. Tha steamer Bela-ian. Cant. Brown, from l.lwamnnl on the afternoon of the 29th ult., via Londonderry on th 80lh, arrived here at 6:80 A. M. lo-day. Th. l.nnrlnn TIlOSB or lUB UUIU BBVB lUOre Is too much reason to fear that the pence of Europ is about to ba broken by on or tne leaat Just ana least necessary wars ot uiou-ern limea. The Time heartily trusla lhat England may hold aloof. Half a doton war vessels were preparing for sea at Plymouth, and it wa reported were to go to the Bt, tiawrenoe. The 80th was Good Friday and a holiday. There Is no lator ooramerolal newt by Ih Belgian. Warlike Preparation teolnar On. Th language of the Prussian press, by evident diolation of the Government, 1 war-like, and great military preparation art being made throughout the kingdom la Austria, Ihe Qovernment 1 also taking measures In anticipation of a ooming struggle, and haa determined to put aa end to th 1'rovlsioDal Hat of affairs ia the Duohies, aod, lfneoessary, will propose that th question be referred to an European (Jongress. The Independent Beige hat newa il.., Ih. tTlna-of Prussia OBS givSO his 0OB- ent to oerlain military arrangement whiob, , tjiaU war u - D- --. most inevitable. , NUMBER 229. Th rat of dlsoouat la th Bank of Eng land remains at o per oent. , Livaaroot, Maroh 20. Th ocmmerolal new ie no later than that received by last (learner, bnt la mora in detail, nakenetd, ward Co. and Richardson, Spenoe & Co. report flour very duU. Wheat tends downward. Corn firmer and 60 higher, but was easier at the otoss; mixed, zusasu oa. The amj au thorities report- beef quiet and el tad y pork easier; bacon Ltaotiv. Lard tend downward; sales at 72j. Butter qui t and steady. " Broker' airoular report angar quiet and 60 lower. ' Coift inaotl re. Pe troleum quiet at 2a a 3a 2d for refiaed. LivaarooL, Maroh 20 Bra. Beaf easier; Daaon lnaotive ana lg lotrer on tne week. Lard ia still declining; sales at 71s72e. : Produoe quiet and atead-r. - ni . e. j. Lohdox, March 20 Eve.- Consols closed at 8U,eMij; U. S. 6-20 71a711; Illinois Central snaro ovaoui; trie an ares 661a6G Breadstuff quiet and steady. Corn is firmer and 6dal higher. 1 " Sugar quiet aad ateady. Co no firm. Te firmer. Rio (toady. Tallow .dull at 4Qsa FBOH WASHINC140N. Inspection yf the rreodmen" Bareaar. WABHINOTOK-, April 10, Mai -General Bteedman, aocompanied by atari officer and some correspondent of leading paper, will leave Bar to-day by order or m rresidenr, on an extensive in peoting tour of the operation of the Freed- mea'e llureau In all th Southern states They proceed first to Riohiaond and will extend their tour to Texas. , COLLARS- o. o. c. SEE. SEE. SEE. -1 1 'I-;'." ..... CoDgress Collar Company, 7 BOLI MAHOrAOTUBEBS (F Tfll POLISHED Bm COLLI B. Thl ! an eaUrtOjr now OolUr, (Kteated Acguit tUb, 1805, and fi only manuiactiired by thi. Can-pan.We aiaim for II tha following daoldnd adranttgita offT ALL other OoUara avar made, ellbvr plain or Mladt 1 ir lit II If mada of Iha Ben Mo. 1 linen Paper 2d- It Ii of (ha most approved atjlf, aad moulded eo that It flte tfae neck-perfectly. 8d. It Ii meriebte. May Vi worn ai a polished Collar, and then turned and worn plain. th. It Ii pollshe nnly om tho On laid. leaf-lag the Inilde free from any no lance that oan oo me off aad adhere lo ot poleon the neck. ftttl. Tr tat area Ha nt 1v ft tf paprrl-. Oth. It may be worn jury ranch longer then aav pleln Colli r, ej Itf polli bod mrf.oti which Dtoaaoiv re tin bit i n,, -,,. on the flnewt liflnen) will nut Bull eailly, Tnui It li the noel Bountiful, Dnrnble auej foliar Eeonoinleal aver offered to the Trade. We are tu well letieBed of irperloilty, that wa ehetlflfliffl any one to prod aoe a collar ai Ntai, Vu rabfo, or toomomkal, and guarantee MtUfhotlon In all oaeri. ' Sampld and Price Met sent Of on application to tbe CONGRESS COLLAR CO, ' No. 11 la Mitllo llreet, Chicago, 111, Alio Mannfaoturera of Iha Best Enameled Garrotes IN TBB BABKBT. Linen Paper Byron and Oarrote LADIES' COLLARS AND CUFFS C'ONORESM COLLAR CO. The Trad, supplied at Hanufaotorers prloMUby XXjaxri-iae car rSlgvlasx-. Noa. 107 & 109 East Town St. SOLB AGENTS FOR fOLI'MBCW, OHIO. ALSO, WHOLKALB DBALIBg IB Fancy Ueoda, Yankee Notions, Per-tn merle, ete. marSdllaw-S.WAS Dr. Stevens & Go HATn DETOT1D rirtEKM TflAOS IH 01 N-01HN&TI tothelreatmeot of Private DiM-in Tbryanarneeaoor withoni tbe nee of mtrcory, all of forme of Paivera Dieeaeai, etpeelally Ihoae of long at tiding. Lota ol eaxnal power reatored ta efeewetka. Viol I ma ot eelt-abaae and txi antra enery, en (Taring from Bp rmetorrhee, epeedili car td. PerAone at a dlttance treated bj adareaelog Dr I SI BVIWH A 0 J , rtO Wluat it , between Fifth and gliih, HrelDnetl.il. meiOOly llVtTJLStiOtEtl- OIVIN UPON TBI PIAMO-fORTI j alao Initrnotlina lo Tornl Mo-lc. Ordere leit at SaLvaan vo.'a Mo'le Store wll noelve pr .nrpt attention. t. A. OUiUHlKB. BariaBMoaa-Piofeeaor Schemer and M'. John alt m. n.a)fl-ly Pure Liberty Lead. (COPT RIQBTSD.) IITABBAHTID TO OOTBB AOBB BUBfAftB 77 ai same walibt tban any otherl Try II, I fom will have bo otherl Maavfaatnra only by i zlKULCit a oiuiin, Wnoleiale Drog, PatBt and Olaas DMlars, Me. lT oath Third street. PlB.tlJacll.elf3Aa.tda tor aala by Paint Deilere g.srally, aslggsawv -I TEBHS OF SUBSCRIPTION.: ' tauti or nn n&ar jocwub : , -. liegle flaboerlbtre, 1 yr, by M to - tingle uUorlbere, 6 moatltt, ....iiui 4 go SluKle talwr.bei. 8 oathe. c SiUKUSulKrfbera. 1 month. . aw ' SiugteaMribeiw, 1 ata'-h, delif rvi Ir,l(t a aa SiugietiDbewlbera, per wok. drilmrtati t1 02 To Af.ntet loci ti be, 16 oentt per week eecheopy. lataVBU W JB A TK.bbb1I J' 17 HIlHi, r er ... M 60 I moethe.. na aa . S moatbe , MM 1 16 1 1 month........... o 40 11MI OV TBI WSMtr fODrMAL. WngUBeUorlbtr, per year.... ft ot BOOK9. B00I1.B atatlouar-r. JOB. II. KIa,s a",,,,,, ,,. , Whol.Bal.aalB.Ull BOOKSELLERS & STATIONERS, No. 109 South IlfRli ftrect," VMON BLOgK, ' ' "" ' Ooliimbua, Ohio. " '' OonuaBtlj on band all tb. leading m Law, Medical and Srhool Bo.ki; - . - A (all Bad complota aaturlment of . , Blank Books and Stationery, PAPRK HANCIINOBv , , . . .. gfvjfirr.niv, WINOOW Bit A DUB, ,;,!. FAITIM, , , rifTtlkro and '-' flt-l'llKKFAtAatM. Wholesale and KetallV " .., MTflOCIBAPHIITCI, JOB fHf HTIM AND III.VIIIXU. B-OonatyOlgvi, Ballroadt, Btntt aa Ism-.GoBipBoi'iMipprftd. , , ... . . MaiO-Baas t COOKING STOVES. 'VHB OBEATBBT IMVBNTtOB Or TBB AOB, A. Th. fel mlaum Oeokiu. Su.l r.r .11 kiA- oooktng, without eltbr o .1 or woodl BiMmla o una la .tor nualljl Knhi Mm folloBto: , .. . TESTIMONIALS: , ooMiaaua March M, lass, , J. B. Dloeat UsarSIrt Tour bmv PetrslMBi Oaok- . logtltove hat ties la ue. B my taailly for seiB.lB. wtwki. W. aav. 'rle. It for tiaklo.. brolllo.. stow. Ing Bed all olbr ordinary parpoiM, sad 1 ass folly ' atthgfd that It vlll dMll ibc Is elaltned lor It. It I 1 w from smoke, dost or dirt, and kef osd doubt tb. bM' SBBIIB.r ttov. BOW 1b b., . t BpeotloUr roan, , 0, I. TILTOBT . . faitor High 81ml At. B Church. OOLUttnill. O.. H.tAti IT. IRAS J. B. DlaUt:' Sir'. 1 I1B.V0 n.Ml VOn. Patrnl-nm ' Btov. over six weeks. We do all the usual oooktng w'th it 1b b7 feB-lly, at a oust of tmtiilm'i ttmfptr It other a-tvabt.g.i av-r a ooal or wotd atov. mflit a. ntoltMt lo all. Verv raatwctfallf-, ? IoAAU B. rOTTB, " , Of Ihalrmaf Wm. B. Folia B Co. 3. B. Discs: Dir Sir: 1 bave' tborceablv toitsd'- tbe Pattolaqm Stova aa a banter, aad do aot hwlt.t. laaajli g that bo othor atoraor farnaoa oaa eota-para with It lor tallof a work, shop work .r .iber plaeee where flat-liooa boa. to be used. J have had chargeol Cloak BULnfaotorlee ror thepaetalxtoea rwn, and bave triad evary InvantloB for eleaallnesa aad codvobIbbc bnt never oould pvarooBia theloi. co ivrnlenca 0' dirt and oppressive beat lo Bnstmer-tlns. With job Petroleum ttoe, howa.er, Ibava-had oa of Aa oca,'iirtoMe la aiu-0itd wllk. whlla tb. aavlng or loal Is lallv aavantr-flva par cant. Very respertrolly - - . i ftu. uBiiij, uioav Bona., lusaoatb "Ighat. 1 a a a "laaecoopmr lo tbeaeeor Ibe Palrotanoi oklpe Stova II first. In tha raadlnaea with wblah ' Ihe flama ftaa bs ahBt oa th. moajrat It la wablad - bo loagar, and thos tb. lortlirr BonaoaaplloB t , Inal b. aro.Dad; and seooudlv. In tha amall aaaatltv Bad cbaapnats of tbo rnal naed. Tbay ara ai aaelly ' managadaad aaaliBB la their ooeratlona maer- dfn.ry gas-light, and do Bot rmlt th. laaat pallid. lamas, or ooaaaira aoi-i'.- mamt ai sj.Me. ft . a e,y oanaot bnt aokoowjada. il a valnabla. oonvenlaot ai d economloa! iovantion, which waoan-oot but think will toon bring It Into vary geaer-' 1 Baa, not only I . private famtllea, tot IB bwar-- fhoraa, boUla rsataor.atf, aV." Ohio flliilwiwaw. , ... "A few eventnae since wa loocd ono or thaaa naat llltle atoves tot up at onr rsaldonea, aod ' tha whola faatlv aroond th. tabla on wbioh tt waa alttlng, partaotly delighted with Ita operation. On tna aay ioiiowibs it was t aiea IB tneiaost tnoroogn manner, to. entire baking ot Satniday, Inotodiog loal b.-eed. plei, Ao , bclog accoaipllBhed 1b Ihi tlmo th.B In an ordinary atova, tha bread was baked- mwea Btoer, being aweet,Bsolal. and with uttw croat. . Tha exper.menta war. lollowed by rcaatlng craning, moiling nioit aaiiaiBotoruy." ire 'aba. preee. It Ii oartalolr ont of tha beet tbjnae aat.'t Ohio ftola Jour.ot. The la-lea are Invitee to -xaralne tbia Stova. Offloeaad gala Boast ATo. SB Aa,l State Barest. Oolnmboi, Ohio. .genie waoieo, ana uooniy mgnti ror rbi.. -' "' fcUigji .. . 1. B. CAOUB, Oea'l Ag't, . .., BAKERY..ft CONFICTIOMRI: Theo. Jone, Wholesale at Uetnll Dealer 1st: BREAD, . TRACKERS, CAKES, , . OAiUMES. i - - VHVITH, SUITS, Ac." R1KKRT lUiJBi'iiifimtnmvuv No. 836 Koulli High at., , . , fcbsv am Otalumbuai .' 0. "" MOCKINO VALLEY " ' Transportation . Linei TBI-WIKKLT LINB BBOM OOLOBBtlg TO'-Laooaater. Lona. Maleonville. ObsaB.ey.it sndAthenaaod all points oo tha Hooking Canal. Tbia Llo. la oompoaed v r - - -.-jn-. - .1 FIRST OIiASH'OAllI,!' Bnllt expreetly for tl:e trade,' and1 tf rohanM and Bblppere oan rely on their prauptntae aud afelyi. . On end after it,,,, (. i ... vi APRIL imM; .Mfc,,.. n k Boat will leave every other day for tbe abpve. named poln't. Freight reorma el onr w art n on aw ai wear aoor'i Waet end ef National Bridge. OHIa.-n Weat.i Broad atreet. , H. I1TUH BON. mr&o t Oolumbns, Ohillloothe & Portsmouth faokbt. And Fast Freight, Line.' T)AIWKNG1B TACRETS tCATl TBOM fOOT " X of Broad atrtet on Vondaya, Wedaeedeye and ' rridaje er cirelfTllle.OhlllleoUie, Jaaper, aevly (throavllle and Iortamoutb, eonneotiag MPorah, month with Btcameie fur Poneroy, OelllpUt . ronton end ell Itendlnge cm the OMo Bfver. TheBoeto are provided with lion llafei lor tha .anaaliaWnof Valnable Packegee. -, " Paeaengure will And tbie tbe moit comfortable and Dleatani mode of t rev-ling down lheotote'. Vref.li reoelved at onr Warehonirt at Keel 'bnA Weet end of National Bridge. fflce-S7 Wart , Bnd Street. 11. VIIUU SON. mrMf . . 1 !r. : .1 ... . . ,. 1 "MB KOTICE TO CONTRACTOB8. . . ........ SIALBD-'PSOPOBAbBWILI. BB BB31VBD" I y tbe Qndenlgned at tha offlet ot tba Board of Pabtte Wort., In tha elty .1 Uilombu., on MOB-'f DAT, IbeHOlb.t Apill, 18SS, betwrrn th. boars of good t o'clock P. at. of sala day, lor tba dellvwrinr sod treaklBB lima atoa. .n Ik. Matlonsl S4 b.- , twean tbe 119th and ISStb mllaa, aa numbered: weet Irom WhMllDg. Th. ana-mat to be delivered oa ths ' I dlllerent miles It aa follow,: On mllaa 10, 1st. lag and Its. SO roil eaebi oa mtloe 1M aad Its, SO rode I each: on mlt-e 1211. 181 and 1st, 60 rode each), , mltei 131, 13S, l, 1S7 and las, 9S rode eaoh. Bidden mnet iuta lbs price per rod ot 100 oehto 1 fart. The atone to be delivered Bt mob plsca, oa Ibe dtrftrent all, aa tba Be.lil.nt Inglnear may dialgnata, as t. b. br.h.a W a alaa aot HWaadlag fonr onaoia la weight. Li Bide lor tha blcakleg aod delivering Banal te Hparate. , "'iv b he right to rrf ot bids Is rtee-ved. , JOHN A. BLA1H, BV.td.nt Bnglsr. " ' Oolambas, Karob SO, ISos sunlit StateeBiBB oopy.J Ladies desiring a Clear and t .l l VVU M. i M I Tbh dallfhtfol Toilet artlota baa noeqnal for Pre.., erring and Beautifying the Oomp'ealon end Skin. Bold by Drufglati everywhere. j ' Ilepot, 74 rUIdTOL WWVOOBWt H. Y. . ftbittd&DiJeaoo, ny ETEANDEaIE. DH. ti. A. St Ft AFP, Oeejllat, trormarly of If. V.,) axclo.tvaly treats-Diarneaa, Dlaeaea. ol ih. Bye., aad In- etr. ni m. sort aINo. ISO touih High alraat, (oppoalta tha UuoCb 'C Hobh,) la Uolamboa, Ohio. Alao furalehee m,il. fall book oa lb. By. and Bar, for to cola. ol poetatMo aay addraia laotdly ; wttn mar sob . ravs. Baa' a. raa STETENSON ate PEN IV, Attorneys ai Law, II, K.tler ! Thlrsl Bt.,ClaelaaalltO via dtf wimm 1 1 oomtMT rv,vj tin V i,